ship.energy
Magazine Features » Alternative Fuels » Can we predict the wind?
Alternative FuelsRegulation

Can we predict the wind?

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ships, developed with his colleagues at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, and considers how ship routing assessments can bring valuable certainty to the wind-assist market



Recently added

Decarbonising ports

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Shock to the system

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Don’t overlook SOx!

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

A weather eye

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Switched-on shipping

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Charged and ready

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Market forces

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Winning Combination

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

No one short answer

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Putting theory into practice

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

A strong long-term bet?

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Beyond the demonstration phase

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...

Keeping your options open

Dr James Mason reviews his recent publication on weather routing for wind-assisted ship...