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Worlds largest electric ship launched by Tasmanian boatbuilder

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An Australian boatbuilder has launched what it describes as the world’s largest battery-power ship, describing it as a “a giant leap forward in sustainable shipping” and the “most important” project it has ever done.

Incat, a manufacturer based in Tasmania, constructed the ship – called Hull 096 – after being contracted by the South American ferry operator Buquebus to build a vessel to run between the Argentinian capital, Buenos Aires, and Uruguay.

Launching the ship in Hobart on Friday, the company said it would operate entirely on battery-electric power, carrying up to 2,100 passengers and 225 vehicles across the River Plate, which forms the border between Argentina and Uruguay. .

“We’ve been building world-leading vessels here in Tasmania for more than four decades, and Hull 096 is the most ambitious, most complex, and most important project we’ve ever delivered,” the chairman of Incat, Robert Clifford, said.

Clifford said Incat hoped to build “as many sustainable ships as possible for the global market, both here in Australia and overseas”.

The company said at 130 metres, Hull 096 was not only the largest electric ship in the world, but also “the largest electric vehicle of its kind ever built”.

View image in fullscreen A look inside Incat’s Hull 096, which can carry up to 2,100 passengers. Photograph: Ethan James/AAP

The ship is equipped with more than 250 tonnes of batteries and has more than 40 megawatt-hours of installed capacity.

Incat said the energy storage system was connected to eight electric-driven water jets and its capacity is four times larger than any previous maritime installation.

“Hull 096 proves that large-scale, low-emission transport solutions are not only possible, they are ready now,” Incat’s chief executive, Stephen Casey, said.

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