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Rockwell Automation Supports The Energy Observer Project

Rockwell Automation provides advanced automation technologies to help drive sustainability in a groundbreaking, zero-emissions vessel

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Press Release
Recent ActivityRecent Activity
Rockwell Automation Supports The Energy Observer Project
Rockwell Automation provides advanced automation technologies to help drive sustainability in a groundbreaking, zero-emissions vessel

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The world’s first vessel powered by hydrogen and renewable energy, the Energy Observer, is on a six-year trip around the world to prove a potential energy system of the future. Rockwell Automation has become an official supplier and service provider for this project, providing automation systems that help power the vessel, which operates with zero greenhouse gasses or fine-particle emissions.

To help ensure 24-hour energy autonomy throughout its global expedition, the Energy Observer uses a combination of intermittent renewable energy: solar panels, wind turbines, lithium-ion batteries and a hydrogen production system.

The Energy Observer team turned to Rockwell Automation for advanced automation technology to help control the vessel’s energy management system. The solution consists of an Allen-Bradley ControlLogix programmable automation controller, Allen-Bradley PowerFlex drives, Allen-Bradley POINT I/O, FactoryTalk View Site Edition (SE) supervision software and FactoryTalk Historian data-capture software, all of which integrate seamlessly to monitor and control the system. A central human machine interface (HMI) completes the solution, delivering real-time information to the crew.

The energy management solution helps the Energy Observer team monitor, control and optimise the distribution of energy sources and make smart decisions about when and how to switch from one energy source to another. It also records the vessel’s operational data throughout its journey and communicates it back to the rest of the team on shore.

One example of this is the lithium-ion battery power being used to drive on-board systems like propulsion and desalination. Solar panels and wind turbines charge the batteries using PowerFlex drives. Should unfavorable environmental conditions cause the battery level to reach 30 percent or lower, the vessel’s hydrogen power source – fed from hydrogen created during the ocean water desalination process – activates to supply additional charging capabilities.

Representatives from the Energy Observer project were present in the Rockwell Automation booth at the recent Movin’ON World Summit on Sustainable Mobility presented by Michelin, held in Montreal in late May.

Published August 27, 2018


About Rockwell Automation

Rockwell Automation, Inc. (NYSE: ROK), is a global leader in industrial automation and digital transformation. We connect the imaginations of people with the potential of technology to expand what is humanly possible, making the world more productive and more sustainable. Headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Rockwell Automation employs approximately 26,000 problem solvers dedicated to our customers in more than 100 countries. To learn more about how we are bringing the Connected Enterprise to life across industrial enterprises, visit www.rockwellautomation.com.

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