Ecological robotically manufactured advanced electric boats and electropropulsion
Our company's goal is to bring ecologically sustainable, robotically manufactured electric boats and electropropulsion system solutions to the market. We focus on high-quality, energy-efficient and low-emission products that meet the growing demand for green technology and responsible water transport.Our company's main business is the design, manufacture and sale of electric boats and electropropulsion systems. The manufacturing process utilizes the latest robotics, which enables high precision, cost-effectiveness and minimizes waste. The hull materials of the boats are recyclable and durable.
Our goal is to establish our position as the leading supplier of electric boats and electropropulsion systems in the Nordic countries and expand into international markets with sustainable and innovative solutions.
The story behind ecological boats
The year was 1972. My father was in Meilahti Hospital for getting palliative care for his advanced cancer. I was about to turn 5 in the autumn of that year.
I was an only child and my mother did not have a driver's license. We took a local taxi to Meilahti Cancer Hospital to see my father in his last days. The taxi driver became familiar and the conversation drifted between the men, while my mother took the time to discuss the last adult matters with my father. The taxi driver was interested in the thoughts of a sociable young man, talking to me as a young man to pass the time.
The taxi driver asked, "What are you going to do when you grow up, boy?" Of course, I was not left speechless and very confident and enthusiastically talked about my future plans.
I told him that I would become a great businessman and inventor. The taxi driver became more interested and asked more specific questions about "how or in what the industry?".
The riverbank had become a central place for the young man, but fishing and spending time there were hindered by the abundant willow bush crawl. When my father was ill, the raking had not been done. So I had figured out how to utilize that huge willow bush crawl in a way that would also support other goals in life. I excitedly told the taxi driver that boats would be made from willows.
The taxi driver wondered: "How do you make boats from them?". The young man already knew that they are not glued or woven, but that fiber is obtained from them, and that would be the key solution to how boats of all sizes and shapes can be made from them. Now, about fifty years later, that method already exists and structures are created from fiber after fiber.
The guiding idea of the slightly older man has always been to take a model from nature. In addition to utilizing ecological materials, this has led to innovative, previously unheard of and advanced, intelligent propulsion technologies of the future. The same wicker boatman became interested in electronics at the age of nine and later in information technology and automation.
When natural materials and technology are combined into embedded systems, innovations that support sustainable development are created. That young man was clearly a radical innovator even at the age of five. It may be that at that time, the wider use of wicker fiber had not yet occurred to many people. The oil industry and polymer technology, on the other hand, were on the rise.
That boatman was later involved in a few electric boat startups. The only challenge was that the completely radical 3D printed ecologically produced components or boat structures with all their electrical oddities did not get a sufficiently advanced team on board.
Solar panels and fiberglass structures with rotating electric propellers are no longer in fashion. We have to move forward, creating completely new technology.