Rather than driving the propellers directly, they give off controlled heat, which in turn can be used to generate electricity to power the yacht’s electric motors.
Lloyds Register recognises that while the potential of nuclear-powered superyachts is very real, there are significant challenges to be addressed, including robust safety measures and strategies for disposing of spent fuel.
“But those issues are not the biggest problems to be overco*e,” says global yacht segment director Engel-Jan de Boer. “Public perception and politics are going to be the main obstacles. Will countries allow nuclear-powered yachts into their territorial waters, allow them to berth in their marinas, allow them to be serviced or refuelled?”
The other major obstacle is cost – even a micro-reactor is likely to cost well over €100m at today’s prices. To overco*e this and some of the other concerns de Boer is suggesting that the reactor itself would not be purchased outright by the yacht builder or owner but leased to it by a licensed service provider over the expected lifetime of the vessel. If this became more widely adopted, economies of scale would help drive prices down and herald the dawn of a new nuclear era.
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Source: Nuclear-Powered Superyachts Could Help Marine Net Zero Targets (http://ht**://www.mby.c**/news/nuclear-powered-superyachts-could-help-marine-net-zero-targets-133536)