Foss, California ports join to develop hybrid tugboat
Seattle company to fit vessels with engines designed to cut pollution
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A large tugboat company hopes to give the shipping industry's workhorse an ecological makeover, adding an electric hybrid system to the tugs' powerful diesel engines.
Foss Maritime, a top U.S. tug and barge operator based in Seattle, is teaming with the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif., to build the electric-diesel hybrid tug.
"It should have a profound impact on tug technology in the decades ahead," Port of Los Angeles spokesman Arley Baker said. "It's a huge step forward."
The first boat could start production later this year and be delivered in 2008 to the Los Angeles area, home of the nation's largest port complex, officials said Thursday.
Foss' hybrid design is similar to the technology used in hybrid cars such as the Toyota Prius, although the tug's engine was more directly inspired by diesel hybrids used in railroad vehicles.
The hybrid tug would still have diesel engines, which provide the horsepower needed to guide container ships or pull a loaded barge.
But when idling in a harbor or doing less-strenuous tasks, the hybrid would rely on electric batteries, supplemented by diesel generators, for its power.
Because diesel engines burn fuel less efficiently at lower speeds, switching to battery power could cut particulate and nitrous oxide emissions 44 percent, along with reducing fuel use and noise, Foss said.
The pilot project is part of ongoing efforts to cut pollution from the locomotives, trucks and ships that flood the country's two busiest container ports.
The use of the hybrid tugs could be expanded if they perform to the standards set by their dirtier cousins, port officials said. Foss also hopes to offer hybrid engines for retrofitting older tugs.
The hybrid is based on a conventional tug model that usually costs about $6 million. Adding the hybrid engine increases the price up to $3 million, said Susan Hayman, a Foss vice president.
California air officials have said that without pollution controls, the growing port complex will be responsible for one-fifth of the pollution in the Los Angeles Basin by 2025.
Los Angeles and Long Beach port officials are contributing about $1.3 million to the project. In exchange, Foss agreed to base the first hybrid tug at the twin ports for five years.
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