PARIS (LOG NEWS SERVICE) — A boat that fuels itself set off July 15 from Paris towards the Atlantic, beginning a 6-year journey its designers hope will serve as a model for emissions-free energy networks of the future.
The boat, Energy Observer, will use its solar panels, wind turbines and a hydrogen fuel cell system to power its trip.
The $5.25 million futuristic-looking 100-foot catamaran will rely on sun or wind during the day and tap into its hydrogen reservoirs at night. It produces its own hydrogen through electrolysis of seawater without greenhouse gas emissions.
During its 6-year journey, it plans 101 stopovers in 50 countries to meet people who are designing tomorrow’s future and to prove a cleaner world is possible.
Originally designed in 1983 for offshore racing, the boat enjoyed a successful career in open-sea sailing races before skippers Frederic Dahirel and Victorien Erussard and a French research institute decided in 2013 to convert it into the Energy Observer project, which they called “the first hydrogen vessel around the world.”
Since then a team of close to 50 people including navigators, naval architects, engineers, designers, and communicators spread out across France have been actively working to recondition and transform the legendary sailboat into...