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26/10/2025 by secretary

On Wednesday, at the ISWG-20, Gavin Allwright, IWSA Secretary General had the great honour to speak as the representative of the International Windship Association membership to the plenary session at the International Maritime Organization at the end of the Intersessional Working Group.

The title of the presentation was “Shipping’s Second Wind: Wind Propulsion and the Energy Transition”.

While some adjustment to the messaging was required in the face of last week’s adjournment of MEPC-ES2, though less than you might think. The short presentation tried to answer three questions:

1 – Is Wind Propulsion development robust enough to continue to grow without further policy support?

Yes, first movers and early adopters, the first 10-15% are actively moving and that is a large enough investment signal for tech providers to continue to bring solutions to market and invest in the supply chain. However, to scale further and quicker we need regulation to encourage later adopters to move.

2 – What level of emission reduction can be achieved and what will that cost?

This can be substantial, 5-20% from standard retrofits based on unchanged motor vessel profiles, optimised up to 30%. Newbuilds can go far higher with primary wind vessels growing in size and number with 50%+ energy provision from wind, higher numbers are achieved on the best routes and when operational profiles are adjusted (weather routing etc.)

If we adopt a total cost of ownership model then these systems ultimately are revenue positive, this can happen within a handful of years, which is the only propulsion system that can make that claim.

3 – Where next?

As a sector, we see 2026-27 as the market inflexion point with 2026 ending with c.200 large ships installed. Demonstrators are then available throughout the fleet and a growing amount of data, knowledge and expertise will be available in the market.

Do we need global policy to turbo-charge the decarbonisation pathway, of course. However, wind propulsion will continue to grow and be at or very near to that inflexion point as we return to IMO to pick up where we left off in October next year.

Filed Under: Decarbonisation, Wind Propulsion, Regulation, Primary wind ship, Wind-assist, Technology, Event, Policy

24/10/2025 by secretary

This week a model of the primary wind SV Juren Ae vessel was presented to the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) for permanent display. The Juren Ae ship is a 48m, 460dwt, two masted soft sail (Indosail) rigged general cargo vessel. It was funded by the German government, built in South Korea in 2024 and now operates in the Marshall Islands as an inter-island cargo and passenger service. Republic of the Marshall Islands Ambassador Albon Ishida presented the model to Mr. David Osborn, Director, Marine Environment Division, IMO

 

Filed Under: Decarbonisation, Wind Propulsion, Primary wind ship, Event, Policy

23/10/2025 by secretary

Huge thank you to the hundreds of IMO delegates who joined us at our Wind Propulsion reception at International Maritime Organization (IMO) last night.

A room full of wind experts, model ships, Pacific music, food, drinks and smiling faces – no small feat after the trials and tribulations of last week.

Thanks to the IMO staff, the IWSA delegation and the experts from our members:

ANEMOI (UK)
BAR Technologies (UK)
bound4blue (Spain)
Dealfeng New Energy Technology Ltd (China)
Micronesian Center for Sustainable Transport (MCST) (Marshall Islands and other Pacific Islands)
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd. (Japan)
Norsepower (Finland)
OceanWings (France)

Filed Under: Decarbonisation, Wind Propulsion, Regulation, Primary wind ship, Wind-assist, Technology, Installation, Event, Policy

26/09/2025 by secretary

ISWG-GHG 20-2-17 – Consistent treatment of wind propulsion in the IMO Net-Zero Framework (IWSA) (2)
Submitted by IWSA (05 September 2025)

DEVELOPMENT OF NEW AND/OR REVISION OF EXISTING GUIDELINES, PROVISIONS, GUIDANCE AND OTHER DOCUMENTS, AS APPROPRIATE, FOR SUPPORTING THE UNIFORM AND EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE IMO NET-ZERO FRAMEWORK

Executive summary:
This document aims to help clarify the key elements of the IMO Net-Zero Framework as it pertains to direct wind propulsion energy in an effort to align those provisions with the core technology and energy pathway neutrality principles that are at the heart of IMO deliberations. To ensure consistent treatment of wind propulsion, the substantial losses sustained through the use of fuel oil/alternative fuel energy pathways should be considered in the attained GFI calculations so as to avoid overvaluing these energy sources within the formula and subsequently undervaluing the wind component. An approach to address this issue has been outlined in document MEPC 82/7/9 (ISWA). This submission also brings forward a series of pertinent issues relating to the same level-playing field principle to be considered when assessing and applying criteria for the issuance of IMO Net-Zero Fund reward allocations and the inclusive and balanced treatment of all energy sources based on their direct and indirect decarbonisation impact, co-benefits and other merits.

Filed Under: Decarbonisation, Wind Propulsion, Regulation, Finance, Policy

01/08/2025 by secretary

Save the Date: Wind Propulsion Session at London International Shipping Week 2025 (LISW 2025)

Together with the Royal Institution of Naval Architects (RINA), International Windship Association (IWSA) will once again be hold a Wind Propulsion Session during London International Shipping Week, taking place on Wednesday, 17th September 2025, 1430-1700 at the RINA HQ.

Join us for a focused afternoon exploring the latest developments in wind propulsion, just ahead of the MEPC Session in October.

🔍 What’s on the agenda?
• MEPC Upcoming Session: What’s being proposed, what’s on the table, and how wind propulsion is being perceived within the IMO context.
• Panel discussions bringing together shipowners, technology providers and policy regulators.
• A spotlight on industry insights, market perspectives and regulatory alignment.

📝 Register your interest here 

Official registration opens 1st September – places will be allocated on a first come, first served basis. Once they’re gone, they’re gone – so make sure you’re on the interest list to receive a reminder as soon as registration opens!

Filed Under: Wind Propulsion, Regulation, Finance, Primary wind ship, Wind-assist, Technology, Installation, Event, Industry Reports, Policy

31/07/2025 by

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