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Veseel search by claw true 2026-05-07T00:36:57.380Z markdown 2026-05-07T00:36:57.380Z

Electric Propulsion Ships / Vessels Under 1MW

Overview

This document surveys electric and hybrid-electric propulsion vessels with total propulsion power under 1 MW (≈ 1,341 hp). This power range covers the majority of small-to-medium commercial, recreational, and specialized marine vessels.


1. Market Power-Segment Categorization

The electric ship market is commonly segmented by propulsion power output. Multiple market research firms use the following standard breakdown:

Power Segment Typical Applications
< 75 kW Small recreational boats, dinghies, small patrol boats, canal boats
75 150 kW Passenger ferries, water taxis, small workboats, tourism vessels
151 745 kW Medium ferries, tugboats, fishing vessels, patrol vessels, OSVs
746 7,560 kW Large ferries, offshore supply, cargo vessels, larger tugs
> 7,560 kW Large ocean-going ships, cruise ships, container vessels

Key Market Finding (GVR): The <75 kW segment is expected to grow at the fastest CAGR (12.0%), while the 75150 kW segment led the global market in 2021 and is projected to maintain dominance through 2030.


2. Vessel Type Categorization Under 1 MW

2.1 By Propulsion System Type

Category Description Typical Power Range
Fully Electric (Battery) Zero-emission, batteries as sole energy source 10 750 kW
Hybrid-Electric Diesel generator + battery, serial or parallel 50 1,000 kW
Plug-in Hybrid Shore charging + onboard generator backup 50 500 kW
Fuel Cell Electric Hydrogen/fuel cell primary or range extender 50 500 kW
Solar-Electric PV panels + battery, auxiliary propulsion < 40 kW

2.2 By Operational Role (under 1 MW)

  1. Small Passenger Ferries / Water Taxis

    • Short-route, frequent docking, opportunity charging
    • Example: Nerthus ferry (Danfoss drives), Casco Bay Lines hybrid ferries
    • Typical power: 50 400 kW
  2. Harbor & Ship-Assist Tugs

    • High bollard pull, intermittent high-power bursts
    • First US all-electric truckable tug: 26 ft, 300+ kW (two PM motors)
    • Case study tug (Springer): 360 kW rated, 720 kW peak
    • Typical power: 200 750 kW
  3. Fishing Vessels

    • Hybrid configurations for fuel savings, silent operation
    • Example: Selfa El-Max 1099 — 80 kW diesel gen + 135 kWh battery
    • Typical power: 50 500 kW
  4. Workboats / Utility Vessels

    • Harbour maintenance, survey, crew transfer
    • Typical power: 50 400 kW
  5. Patrol & Enforcement Vessels

    • Coast guard, police, border patrol
    • Typical power: 75 500 kW
  6. Recreational / Pleasure Boats

    • Day cruisers, sailboat auxiliary, luxury tenders
    • Examples: X Shore Eelex 8000 (175 kW peak), Optima E10 (40 kW)
    • Typical power: 10 200 kW
  7. Small Cargo / Inland Waterway Vessels

    • Containerized battery solutions, short-range
    • Example: China's "Three Gorges Hydrogen Boat No. 1" — 500 kW fuel cell
    • Typical power: 200 750 kW

3. Real Vessel Examples Under 1 MW

Vessel / Project Type Propulsion Power Battery / Energy References
X Shore Eelex 8000 Recreational 175 kW peak / 145 kW continuous BoatTEST
Selfa El-Max 1099 Fishing 80 kW (diesel gen) 135 kWh battery Wikipedia: Electric boat
Optima E10 Day cruiser 40 kW 2×63 kWh Kriesel batteries MBY
Small Truckable Tug (US) Harbor tug 300+ kW (2× PM motors) WorkBoat
Tugboat Case Study (Springer) Harbor tug 360 kW rated / 720 kW peak 518.4 kWh per operating mode Springer Nature Link
ENVGO NV1 Hydrofoil Leisure / Hydrofoil 220 kW (2×110 kW) Plugboats
FlyShark FS90 (Baywatt) Outboard motor 48 kW 56 kWh battery Baywatt
Three Gorges Hydrogen Boat No. 1 Inland cargo 500 kW (fuel cell) Hydrogen fuel cell ScienceDirect
E-Kotug Rotortug Harbor tug (hybrid) Multiple Cat engines + electric Hybrid config E-Mobility Engineering
Nerthus (Danfoss) Electric ferry All-electric (specifics TBD) Danfoss iC7 drives Danfoss
Battery Steele (Casco Bay Lines) Hybrid ferry Electric-diesel hybrid WorkBoat

4. Classification Societies & Standards for Electric Propulsion

Major Classification Societies (IACS Members)

Society Headquarters Key Rules for Electric Propulsion
DNV (Det Norske Veritas) Norway DNVGL-RU-SHIP Pt.6 Ch.2 — Battery(Power), Battery(Safety) notations; AP notation for alternative propulsion
ABS (American Bureau of Shipping) USA Requirements for Hybrid Electric Power Systems for Marine and Offshore Applications (2024)
LR (Lloyd's Register) UK Rules for electrical and electronic installations, electric propulsion
BV (Bureau Veritas) France Marine & Offshore rules for electrification projects
KR (Korean Register) South Korea Electric propulsion system rules (domestic & international)
CCS (China Classification Society) China Rules for electric propulsion and hybrid systems

Applicable Standards

  • IEC 60092-501 — International standard for design, construction, and installation of electric propulsion systems (primary reference for all classification societies)
  • IEC 60092-101 through -507 — Electrical installations in ships (series covering generation, distribution, protection, cables, etc.)
  • ISO 16315 — Small craft — Electric propulsion system
  • ISO 10088 — Fuel systems for small craft

References:


5. Key Industry Players (Electric Propulsion Systems Under 1 MW)

Company Product / Solution Power Range
Wärtsilä DC/AC hybrid systems, Low Loss Solution, full electric packages 100 kW multi-MW
GE Vernova (Power Conversion) Commercial marine electric power & propulsion LV & MV, all scales
ABB Marine & ports electric propulsion, Azipod 100 kW multi-MW
Siemens Energy SGM shaft generator/motor, BlueDrive Plus C 100 kW multi-MW
Danfoss Drives iC7 series, Editron system 10 kW 1 MW
Yanmar Marine commercial electric propulsion systems 100 kW 1 MW
Fischer Panda Diesel electric drive systems for smaller vessels 5 50 kW
Torqeedo Electric outboards and inboards (Deep Blue, Cruise) 1 100 kW
Oceanvolt Electric inboard motors (ServoProp, SD system) 6 50 kW
ePropulsion I-Series, Navy series inboard motors 10 40 kW
Integrel Solutions E-Drive hybrid-electric system 10 50 kW
Transfluid EPS Marine system with Reverse gearbox 11 700 kW

References:


6. Key Technical Observations (Sub-1 MW)

  1. DC Distribution Dominance: Most modern sub-1 MW electric propulsion systems use DC distribution (690 VDC or 400 VDC bus), enabling easier integration of batteries, renewable sources, and multi-level converters.

  2. Low Voltage vs Medium Voltage: Vessels under 1 MW almost exclusively use low voltage (≤ 1,000 VAC / ≤ 1,500 VDC). MV systems (>1 kV) are typically for 1 MW+ installations.

  3. Battery Sizing: Battery capacity for sub-1 MW vessels ranges from ~50 kWh (small ferries) to 1+ MWh (larger tugs). Opportunity charging at docking is standard for ferries.

  4. Propulsion Motor Types: Permanent magnet synchronous motors (PMSM) are increasingly preferred for their high torque density and efficiency, especially in the sub-1 MW range.

  5. Power Converter Trends: Two-level converters are standard in most sub-1 MW installations, but multi-level (3-level NPC/T-type) converters are gaining traction for their improved efficiency and power quality — particularly relevant for this Master's thesis topic.

  6. Regulatory Framework: All electric propulsion installations under 1 MW must comply with classification society rules and IEC 60092-501, with additional requirements from flag state authorities.


Document generated: 2026-05-05