TRIFOILER ELECTRIC FAST FERRY DEMO PROJECT COMPLETED

Jun 10, 2025 | Ship design & naval architecture news

Ship designer Chartwell Marine has announced the successful completion of its trimaran fast ferry TriFoiler demonstrator project.

The electric trimaran vessel, developed in partnership with Southampton Solent University and Newcastle Marine Services, under the UK Government’s Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition (CMDC3), has concluded initial sea trials on Southampton water, following successful on-time, on-budget launch in March.

Set out to explore the feasibility of zero-emission passenger ferries, sea trials revealed the TriFoiler could be five times cheaper to run than an equivalent fossil fuel powered monohull vessel of the same size and displacement. Demonstrating potential for reducing energy consumption in commercial operations – with or without foils – the trials highlighted the suitability of the electric trimaran for inland and inshore waterways ferry operations.

The project was part-funded by a £1.86 million grant via the UK Shore programme – a Department for Transport (DfT) initiative – delivered by Innovate UK, part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).

Andy Page, MD Chartwell Marine, said: “Successfully completing the TriFoiler project is a big milestone and testament to the team’s hard work. The sea trial results clearly show that a trimaran, coupled with electric propulsion systems, will provide an efficient, reliable and environmentally friendly solution for the ferry industry. Working closely with Solent University and Newcastle Marine Services, we’ve taken this promising concept from R&D to real-world testing, and the results are encouraging. This was delivered by a dynamic, nimble team in a short time frame, and shows real commercial promise.”

Pairing a lightweight trimaran hull with electric propulsion, the TriFoiler achieves high efficiency and manoeuvrability at both high and low speed. Its enhanced stability, made possible by the trimaran configuration and foil-mounted electric motors positioned widely on the foil, offers a simple, robust design, using commercial off the shelf equipment that has the potential to meet the demands of day-to-day commercial operations.

Giles Barkley, Southampton Solent University, said: “The project exemplifies how collaboration between academia and industry can accelerate innovation. We created a full-size digital twin of the vessel to replicate its performance on water at the university. Now validated with data from the trials, this enables us to enhance future designs while also supporting the training and development of the next generation of naval architects.”

Mike Biddle, Executive Director, Net Zero, Innovate UK, added: “Chartwell Marine’s TriFoiler technology is a good example of UK innovation driving decarbonisation in a vital international sector. It shows that net zero doesn’t mean compromise – delivering lower emissions can also be cheaper to run, faster and more manoeuvrable. “We’re proud to work in partnership with DfT to deliver the UK Shore programme and this demonstration exemplifies everything it set out to achieve, paving the way for a more sustainable, efficient and investable UK maritime transport sector.”

Chartwell Marine says that further testing will resume on the vessel incorporating the latest findings to inform the next stage of development.

Image: Chartwell’s TriFoiler demonstrator at sea (source: Chartwell Marine)

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