Rolls-Royce (RR) and Japanese multi-modal transport company Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MOL) have signed a deal to collaborate in the development of its intelligent awareness system.

The collaboration will be on board 165 metre passenger ferry Sunflower, owned and operated by MOL's subsidiary company. Ferry Sunflower operates on a 222-nautical mile route between Kobe and Oita via the Akashi Kaikyo, Bisan Seto and Kurushima Straits.

Enhanced Understanding of Surroundings

RR Intelligent awareness systems are to make vessels safer, easier and more efficient to operate by providing crew with an enhanced understanding of their vessel’s surroundings. This will be achieved by fusing data from a range of sensors with information from existing ship systems, such as Automatic Identification System (AIS) and radar. Data from other sources, including global databases, will also have a role.

Towards Autonomous Shipping

Asbjørn Skaro, RR, Director Digital & Systems – Marine, said: 'We are exploring and testing how to combine sensor technologies effectively and affordably. Pilot projects such as this allow us to see how they can be best adapted to the needs of the customer and their crews so that our product effectively meets the needs of both. Successful pilots and product development programmes are also an important step towards the further development of remote and autonomous vessels and meeting our goal of having a remote controlled ship in commercial use by the end of the decade.'

Intelligent Awareness System

Rolls-Royce expects to be able to undertake an Approval of Concept and have its intelligent awareness product commercially available in 2018.

The system builds on experiences from R&D work worldwide. The intelligent awareness system will benefit from RR’s experience in the Tekes funded project Advanced Autonomous Waterborne Applications Initiative (AAWA), which has been running since June 2015. The company has been conducting a series of tests of the sensor arrays in a range of operating and climatic conditions on board Finferries’ 65 metre double ended ferry Stella, which operates between Korpo and Houtskär in the Archipelago Sea on the southwest coast of Finland.

Picture: MOL's ferry Sunflower (from RR).