07/03/2025

Driving the Future: Cost Savings with EVs and iNetic’s rDA Platform

25/09/2025

Building the UK Supply Chain for Next-Generation Electric Motors & Drivetrains

09/12/2025

Emerging Battery Technologies

14/07/2025

Redefining Electric Motor Design for Next-Generation Powertrains

08/10/2025

The Hidden Impact of Auxiliary Systems on EV Efficiency and Range

09/01/2026

Why Marine Electrification Starts with Compliance

Marine electrification promises cleaner, quieter vessels – but bringing electric propulsion to the seas isn’t as simple as dropping a Tesla drivetrain into a ship. The maritime domain is governed by strict regulations and classification society rules that make compliance a foundational design consideration, not an afterthought. In fact, ensuring regulatory compliance from day one is often the only way to turn bold electrification concepts into practical realities on the water. This article explores why compliance comes first in marine electrification, how marine rules shape technical design (from electrical safety and redundancy to EMC and fire protection), and what it means for system-level engineering. We’ll also look at real-world projects (ferries, workboats, offshore vessels) where a compliance-first approach paved the way for success, and conclude with why marine-savvy integration partners are key in this emerging field.

07/03/2025

Driving the Future: Cost Savings with EVs and iNetic’s rDA Platform

14/07/2025

Redefining Electric Motor Design for Next-Generation Powertrains

25/09/2025

Building the UK Supply Chain for Next-Generation Electric Motors & Drivetrains

08/10/2025

The Hidden Impact of Auxiliary Systems on EV Efficiency and Range

09/12/2025

Emerging Battery Technologies

09/01/2026

Why Marine Electrification Starts with Compliance

Marine electrification promises cleaner, quieter vessels – but bringing electric propulsion to the seas isn’t as simple as dropping a Tesla drivetrain into a ship. The maritime domain is governed by strict regulations and classification society rules that make compliance a foundational design consideration, not an afterthought. In fact, ensuring regulatory compliance from day one is often the only way to turn bold electrification concepts into practical realities on the water. This article explores why compliance comes first in marine electrification, how marine rules shape technical design (from electrical safety and redundancy to EMC and fire protection), and what it means for system-level engineering. We’ll also look at real-world projects (ferries, workboats, offshore vessels) where a compliance-first approach paved the way for success, and conclude with why marine-savvy integration partners are key in this emerging field.