China Zorrilla (ship)
China Zorrilla at the Incat shipyard in June 2025 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Uruguay | |
| Name | China Zorrilla |
| Namesake | China Zorrilla |
| Owner | 2025–present: Buquebus |
| Route | Buenos Aires—Colonia del Sacramento (55-60 km)[1] in 90 minutes[2] |
| Builder | Incat, Hobart, Australia |
| Cost | $200 million[3] |
| Yard number | 096 |
| Launched | 2 May 2025 |
| In service | early 2026 (scheduled)[3] |
| Home port | Montevideo, Uruguay |
| Identification | IMO number: 9916678 |
| Status | Under construction |
| General characteristics | |
| Tonnage | 14,000 GT |
| Length | 130 m (430 ft) |
| Beam | 32 m (105 ft) |
| Propulsion | 40 MWh battery, 8×2.4 MW electric motors driving 8 Wärtsilä WXJ1100 Waterjets |
| Speed | 25 kn (46 km/h)[4] |
| Capacity | 225 cars and 2,100 passengers |
China Zorrilla is a battery electric roll-on/roll-off catamaran ferry, scheduled to commence operation in 2026[5] by Buquebus across the Río de la Plata connecting Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay and Buenos Aires, Argentina.[6]
Built in Hobart, Australia by Incat under the provisional name of Hull 096 and launched in May 2025 with a cost of $200 million,[3] it is the largest fully electric ship, and largest battery electric vehicle of any kind, in the world.
It was named in honor of the Uruguayan grande dame and actress China Zorrilla (1922–2014), who developed her acting career in stage and screen in both Argentina and Uruguay, as a representative of rioplatense culture.[7]
History
Incat's existing relationship with Buquebus has involved construction and delivery of 8 other ships,[8] amongst them the gas turbine catamaran ferry HSC Francisco to Buquebus in 2013, at the time the fastest turbine ship in the world.[9][10]
In May 2019, Buquebus originally commissioned Incat to deliver a new ship designed to cruise at 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph) on its short 30 nmi (56 km; 35 mi) route between Buenos Aires and Colonia del Sacramento. The technology would be dual-fuel propulsion, capable of operating on liquefied natural gas and diesel, with around 400 tonne of Wärtsilä-31 main engines, 100 tonne gearboxes, 180 tonne cryogenic fuel tanks and 100 tonne fuel.[11][12][13][14]
While the ship structure was being built in January 2023, Buquebus and Incat renegotiated their agreement,[15] and revised the specification to make the ship fully battery-electric (60 km at 24 knots), requiring structural changes in the ship.[16][17][18] The $170 million agreement was partly financed with $67 million from International Finance Corporation and $107 million from Banco Santander Uruguay.[19][6]
The ship was launched at Incat's facility on the Derwent River on 2 May 2025.[20][21][22] The ferry began charging the battery in October 2025,[23] powered up the battery, motors and waterjets in December 2025,[24] and began sea trials in the harbour at Incat in January 2026..[25][26] A speed of 29 knots was reached, with 600 tonnes of cargo onboard.[27] It is scheduled to ride on a heavy-lift ship for a month from Tasmania over the Pacific Ocean to Uruguay in March 2026.[3][28]
Design
The aluminium vessel measures 130 metres (430 ft) in length and has 3 decks to carry up to 2,100 passengers and 225 vehicles; bigger than the company's other ships.
Its propulsion system comprises eight 2.4 MW electric waterjets; two fixed and two steerable in each hull. They are powered by a 40 MWh Corvus Energy Dolphin lithium-ion battery system built in Norway,[17][27][29] weighing over 250 tonnes. This system, supplied by Finnish company Wärtsilä,[4] features the largest battery installed on a ship, enabling the ferry to operate entirely on electric power.[30] The battery system is arranged in 4 separate rooms and has 12 battery arrays with 418 modules each, for a total of 5,016 battery units. Weight and temperature are critical aspects, so the modules are not rack mounted, and each module has a cooling fan.[2]
Incat states that the weight of the electric system is lighter than the equivalent diesel engines and associated LNG components.[28][31] Parts of the route is only 2.5 m (8.2 ft) shallow water, requiring low weight and smaller waterjets.[13]
The ferry is equipped with a 2,300 square meter duty-free shopping area, the largest retail space on any ferry globally.[32] The shopping is an important part of the ferry business, and requires lower speed to prolong passengers' spending during the crossing.[12] The lower speed decreases drag significantly and allows lower energy use and thus a smaller battery.[13]
The ferry has 6 escape chutes leading to 13 life rafts, with a combined capacity of 2,432 people.[33]
Operation
In Buenos Aires, the company terminal and port is at Dársena Norte harbour, between Retiro railway station, Puerto Madero neighborhood and Costanera Sur Ecological Reserve.
The ferry's travel plan is scheduled for two roundtrips per day, with charging between each of the 4 crossings.[3] The ferry recharges from 20% to 80% state of charge in 40—80 minutes at the company's charge point in each port.[27][34] The charge point uses 8kA AC / 16kA DC[35][28] in two Wärtsilä chargers at a combined 16 MW for $14 million.[6]
In Uruguay, the high power required a new cable for 20 million dollars, installed by UTE (grid company).[34] The electricity sector in Uruguay has 98% renewable power,[36] while the electricity sector in Argentina has 25% hydropower, 15% wind&solar, and 10% nuclear power.
References
- ^ Otero, Alejandra (5 May 2025). "El ferry eléctrico más grande del mundo es el 'China Zorrilla': un gigante con baterías equivalentes a más de 800 coches eléctricos y que empezará a llevar pasajeros este mismo año". Motorpasión (in Spanish).
- ^ a b Bates Ramirez, Vanessa (6 November 2025). "Electric Boat's 5,016 Batteries Drive Maritime Shift - IEEE Spectrum". spectrum.ieee.org. IEEE Spectrum.
- ^ a b c d e "Nuevo barco China Zorrilla de Buquebus estará operativo en enero - RO CONTENIDOS". www.ro.com.uy (in Spanish). 16 October 2025.
- ^ a b "What will power the world's largest zero-emissions, lightweight catamaran ferry?". Wärtsilä. Retrieved 10 June 2025.
- ^ Marinero, Ismael (2025-11-23). "El megabarco eléctrico más grande del mundo: 130 metros y más de 5.000 baterías para transportar a 2.100 pasajeros". El Español (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-11-25.
- ^ a b c "Buquebus, Banco Santander, and IFC sign financing for the world's largest electric ferry on the Argentina-Uruguay route". IFC. 26 July 2024.
partial credit guarantee of USD 67 million. Buquebus will invest another USD 14 million in two charging stations and transmission infrastructure to provide electricity to the e-ferry
- ^ "Saying goodbye to China Zorrilla". Buenos Aires Herald. 19 September 2014. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- ^ Báez, Lorena Zeballos (2025-10-14). "Instalan en Colonia los cargadores para el China Zorrilla, el ferry 100% eléctrico más grande del mundo". EL PAIS (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-10-14.
- ^ "The Fastest Ship on Earth Powered By Jet Engines". Gadgets. Archived from the original on 2014-07-13. Retrieved 2025-10-14.
- ^ "Incat's Dual-Fuel Ferry 'Francisco' the Fastest in the World". offshore.energy.biz. 18 June 2013. Retrieved 5 June 2025.
- ^ Blenkey, Nick (20 May 2019). "Incat gets order for world's largest aluminum hulled ship". Marine Log.
- ^ a b Moore, Rebecca (31 March 2020). "Incat reveals design and technology behind Buquebus' second LNG ferry". Riviera Maritime. Retrieved 5 June 2025.
The slower speed will allow more time to shop. the route of the new ship includes a lot of shallow water with a draught of only 2.5 m . two LNG tanks to be used. The fuel tanks are very large and heavy – each one weighs 90 tonnes. The fuel itself is kept at -250°C and the tanks have to be insulated to keep it as a liquid. Buquebus' newbuild could have used batteries, if electric power had been available to the ferry operator
- ^ a b c "Interview with Incat". Everything Electric.
6-9 mins (Bob Clifford)
- ^ Blenkey, Nick (31 August 2022). "World's largest aluminum cat will have Wärtsilä propulsion package". Marine Log.
four Wärtsilä 31DF dual-fuel engines, four Wärtsilä WXJ1500SR waterjets, and two Wärtsilä LNGPac fuel storage
- ^ "Buquebus, Incat working to switch LNG-fueled ferry order to electric power". LNG Prime. 19 January 2023.
- ^ Roberts, Peter (16 January 2023). "Incat sells first electric passenger and vehicle ferry". Australian Manufacturing Forum.
- ^ a b "World's largest battery electric vessel is set for 2025 delivery". MarineLog.com. 24 August 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2025.
power conversion system, DC shore charging system, the 40 MWh Corvus battery modules, the DC hub, the eight electric motors, eight Wärtsilä axial flow WXJ1100 waterjets
- ^ "Visit to Incat shipyard where the largest fully electric ferry to date is being built". Shippax. 14 November 2023.
The 130-metre CHINA ZORRILLA for Buquebus will serve a 1h 20min route between Argentina and Uruguay fully electric thanks to its massive 40 MWh battery pack
- ^ "Disclosure Buquebus electric ferry". disclosures.ifc.org. International Finance Corporation. 30 May 2024.
- ^ "World's largest '100 per cent electric' ship launched by Tasmanian builder Incat". ABC News. 2 May 2025. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ Next generation green ferry Ships Monthly May 2025 page 8
- ^ Incat Electric Ship Afloat issue 422 June 2025 page 32
- ^ Carroll, David (21 October 2025). "Incat begins power-up of world's largest battery-electric ship". Energy Storage.
one of the 130-meter vessel's four battery rooms now receiving electrical charge
- ^ Hill, Joshua S. (15 December 2025). ""Remarkable:" World's largest battery-electric ship powers up for first time in Australia". The Driven.
- ^ McKay, Crystal (16 January 2026). "'Relief' as world's biggest electric ferry starts sea trials". ABC News. ABC News.
- ^ "M015-26 - Port of Hobart, Storm Bay, Frederick Henry Bay – INCAT sea trials". Marine and Safety Tasmania. 16 January 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b c Baird, Dr Neil (9 March 2026). "VESSEL REVIEW | China Zorrilla – Uruguay's Buquebus to operate world's largest fully electric ferry". Baird Maritime / Work Boat World.
- ^ a b c "Building the world's largest electric ferry (text)". ABC News (Australia). 21 February 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
Ironically, compared to a traditional diesel engine with fuel tanks, it's slightly lighter. We're actually saving weight. the modules actually go together.
- ^ "The Switch to supply DC-Hub and unique protection devices for world's largest marine battery system". Shippax.
semiconductor-based device disconnects any failing drive module within 10 microseconds from the common DC link
- ^ "'World's largest' electric ship measuring 130 metres launched by Tasmanian boatbuilder". The Guardian. 2 May 2025.
- ^ Davis, Jess (20 February 2025). "Building the world's biggest electric ferry (video)". ABC News (Australia).
- ^ "Incat completes hull of huge electric vessel". Australian Manufacturing Forum. 24 September 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2025.
- ^ Patrascu, Daniel (16 February 2026). "This Is How People Will Escape the World's Largest Electric Vehicle If It Ever Sinks". autoevolution.
- ^ a b "Comenzaron en el Puerto de Colonia las obras para instalar los cargadores que alimentarán al "China Zorrilla"". Colonia Multimedia (in Spanish). 15 October 2025.
- ^ "Zinus to power groundbreaking fully electric Ferry". Shippax. 21 December 2023.
- ^ Machado, Alicia (5 August 2025). "Uruguay Energy". International Trade Administration.
Today, over 98 percent of Uruguay's electricity is generated from hydro, wind, solar, and biomass
External links
Media related to HSC China Zorrilla at Wikimedia Commons