For a few months now I have quoting a claim that 70% of ferries on order had batteries, based on reading the stat in what I considered a reliable site. After digging deeper into the orderbook and the denominator, I do not think that figure stands up, but the actual number is still large. The problem was not that ferry electrification had been oversold. The problem was that I had treated an incomplete numerator as if it described the whole market. DNV, as reported by Riviera and repeated by Interferry conference material, identified 98 battery-equipped car and passenger ferries on the orderbook as of May 2024. Clarksons, in its July 2025 world fleet statistics, put the total global ship orderbook at 6,890 vessels, but grouped cruise and ferry together rather than giving a clean ferry denominator. Cruise Industry News separately counted 74 cruise ships on order at the start of 2026. Put those together and the defensible conclusion is not 70%, but something closer to two-fifths of ferry orders having battery-electric or battery-hybrid drivetrains, depending on how tightly the category is defined. That is still a big shift. It just is not a 70% shift. That correction matters because the global ferry market is worth understanding on its own terms. Ferries are not a sideshow in shipping. They are one of the clearest cases where electrification has already moved from conference panels and pilot projects into fleet planning, vessel procurement, and infrastructure investment. The reason is simple. Ferries sit in the narrow band of maritime transport where distance, schedule, terminal infrastructure, and local pollution concerns all line up in favor of batteries more often than not. They are not easy because maritime engineering has suddenly become romantic or visionary. They are easier because the operating reality is unusually structured. Fixed routes, repeated voyages, known dwell times, and terminals at both ends change the math. A battery-electric truck still has to find a charger on a sprawling road network. A ferry comes back to the same berth. That sounds mundane. It is also the reason the segment matters so much. It is worth starting with scale, because the scale is larger and messier than many people assume. Riviera, citing Clarksons data, reported a global fleet of 8,704 passenger ferries as of May 2024. That number alone is a reminder that the ferry business is not a boutique market built around a few Nordic case studies. It is a sprawling global fleet spread across urban harbors, island chains, inland waterways, airport links, tourist routes, and lifeline services connecting communities that do not have bridges or tunnels. If even 10% of that fleet turned over to electrified propulsion in one replacement cycle, that would mean hundreds of vessels. If one-quarter of it turned over, that would mean more than 2,000 vessels. The size of the opportunity is not theoretical. It is arithmetic. But the global ferry market is not one market. It is several overlapping markets that happen to use similar hulls and serve similar purposes. There are passenger-only urban ferries carrying commuters across short spans. There are Ro-Pax ferries carrying both people and vehicles across estuaries, channels, and sheltered coastal routes. There are larger regional ferries connecting islands to the mainland, often in harsher conditions and at longer distances. There are fast ferries and hydrofoils chasing higher speeds on routes where time savings matter. There are tourist and leisure ferries with very different annual duty cycles from public-service vessels. And there are airport link ferries, workboat-adjacent ferries, and municipal services that sit somewhere in between. Once those categories are separated, the electrification picture becomes clearer. Batteries are not competing with diesel in a single universal market. They are competing in a set of route-and-service niches, each with its own physical and economic limits. That is why ferries have become the leading edge of maritime electrification. The physics are not mysterious. If a ferry sails 5 kilometers or 10 kilometers each way, docks at a terminal with a fixed berth, spends several minutes or longer loading and unloading, and repeats that trip throughout the day, the battery case starts to look strong. If the vessel burns diesel today, the operator is also paying not just for fuel, but for engines, emissions equipment, maintenance labor, vibration, noise, and the challenge of moving pollution into port cities and waterfronts where people live and work. Batteries do not solve every part of the problem, but they replace a surprising amount of machinery and a surprising amount of uncertainty on the routes where the fit is good. That is why ferry electrification has moved faster than short-sea shipping. Short-sea vessels have longer voyages, limited charging opportunities, and far larger energy demands. Ferries often do not. The market evidence supports that logic. According to the Maritime Battery Forum, summarized by Safety4Sea and Bureau Veritas, there were about 1,045 battery-powered vessels in operation globally as of March 2025, with another 561 under construction. Most of those were hybrids and only around 20% were pure battery-electric. That wider vessel count includes much more than ferries, but the important point is that ferries sit at the center of the battery story, not at the edge. DNV’s count of 346 operational battery-equipped car and passenger ferries, plus 98 on the orderbook as of May 2024, means that ferries account for a large share of the installed maritime battery base even before considering passenger-only craft and smaller categories that are not always captured cleanly in public summaries. Ferry operators are not waiting for 2040 to test the concept. They are already buying, running, and replacing vessels with electric architectures now. The most useful way to think about where electrification sits right now is by route type. Urban passenger ferries are the easiest category. Their route lengths are short, their schedules are regular, their terminal dwell times are manageable, and their passengers care about comfort, noise, and local air quality. The battery packs are smaller, the charger power requirements are lower, and the economic case is often straightforward. Short-route Ro-Pax ferries are the next strong category. These vessels are heavier because they carry vehicles, but the same logic still applies on many routes. Medium-distance regional ferries are where the market starts to tilt toward hybrid solutions, because energy demand rises faster than operators would like and charging windows can get tighter. High-speed ferries and hydrofoils are more selective still. Speed is expensive in maritime transport. Pushing a hull quickly through water raises power demand sharply, and battery size follows. There is progress here, and some routes will fit well, but the segment is less forgiving. Then there are the difficult edge cases. Long exposed routes, rough-weather routes, and very large ferries may stay hybrid for a while or move later. In other words, the current market is not “ferries are electric now.” It is “the most electrifiable ferry segments are already turning, and the rest are sorting themselves by physics.” Geography matters as much as route length. Northern Europe moved first because policy, grid quality, ferry density, shipbuilding capacity, and fuel costs lined up. Norway became the emblematic case, but it is not alone. Northern Europe has the route structures and policy frameworks that reward lower-emission, lower-noise, lower-maintenance vessels. Southern Europe and island systems are a different story, but still a promising one. There the drivers include port-city air quality, tourism exposure, and the rising cost of marine fuels. Transport & Environment’s recent European work is useful because it pushes the discussion from isolated examples toward fleet-level potential. The organization found that 20% of Europe’s existing ferries could already be cheaper as battery-electric newbuilds in 2025, and that 52% could rely on battery-electric propulsion by 2035. Those are not trivial shares. If a continent-wide ferry fleet can economically move from one-fifth viable now to roughly half viable within a decade, that is no longer a demonstration market. That is a transition market. North America sits somewhere between early adoption and uneven execution. British Columbia has been one of the cleaner illustrations of the strategic case because ferry routes are important, public ownership is central, and fleet renewal can be planned rather than improvised. Quebec, Toronto, the Pacific Northwest, San Francisco Bay, New York, and a handful of other systems are all adding to the picture, but not in a uniform way. Some are pursuing full battery-electric vessels. Some are buying hybrids. Some are still in planning and procurement. Some are constrained more by terminal power and public procurement than by vessel design. North America is not lagging because the physics are worse. It is lagging where institutions are fragmented, utilities move slowly, or procurement cycles drag on. That distinction matters, because it means the barrier is often administrative rather than technical. Asia is important and often under-read in English-language commentary. China has the industrial depth to matter in any battery-heavy transport segment. Southeast Asia has dense ferry networks, urban water transport, island services, and many areas where reducing diesel pollution near population centers would have immediate health value. India’s water metro developments are part of that story. So are emerging electric passenger services and battery projects in Singapore and other regional markets. The challenge is that public disclosure is less consistent. Europe and North America often publish polished case studies, order announcements, and technical summaries in English. Asian markets sometimes do, but not always, and not in a way that makes clean apples-to-apples comparison easy. That weak visibility should not be confused with weak activity. It means the global census is still rough around the edges, not that the market is not real. Technology labels also need sorting. Battery-electric and battery-hybrid are not the same thing, and both should be treated differently from hydrogen or LNG. A battery-electric ferry runs on stored electricity and expects regular shore charging. A battery-hybrid ferry still carries combustion machinery, but shifts propulsion architecture toward electric drive, battery support, and in many cases lower fuel use and better operational flexibility. Hybrids are not a failure case. In the medium term they are part of the market clearing mechanism for routes where full electrification is not yet ideal or where operators need to reduce risk while upgrading terminals. Hydrogen remains much smaller than its advocates often imply, a single operating ferry today with a single at risk ferry on order. In ferry applications it carries the burden of fuel production, storage, bunkering, fuel-cell systems, safety requirements, and higher system cost. LNG has found a few ferry applications, but it increasingly looks like a transition that arrives late and ages badly, especially once methane slip and long asset lives are taken seriously. The market is not waiting for perfect ideological purity. It is sorting propulsion systems according to route fit, infrastructure, and cost. The most interesting part of the story right now is that the constraint has moved ashore. For years the question sounded like this. Can batteries really power a working ferry? On many routes, that question has been answered. The harder question now is whether the port can deliver the power. Transport & Environment’s European analysis is useful here as well. It found that 57% of ports would need chargers below 5 MW to support electric ferry operations. That is not nothing, but it is also not the stuff of science fiction. A 5 MW charger running for half an hour delivers 2.5 MWh. Run it for 20 minutes and it delivers about 1.67 MWh. Run it multiple times a day and the energy moved adds up quickly. For many ferry routes, the issue is not whether the charger is impossible. It is whether the berth, transformer, feeder line, and utility interconnection are ready. Grid access, port design, berth automation, charger uptime, and construction sequencing are now as important as hull design and battery chemistry. This is also where fleet age starts to matter. Transport & Environment notes that the average European ferry is 26 years old. Toronto’s harbor ferries are more than twice that age. A fleet that old is ripe for renewal, but renewal does not happen all at once. Operators do not scrap usable vessels because a technology trend looks attractive in a slide deck. They replace vessels on a schedule shaped by maintenance condition, regulatory pressure, financing, and service needs. That means electrification advances in pulses. A procurement cycle opens. A port is rebuilt. A route is prioritized. A vessel class is replaced. Then the next tranche follows. The market will look lumpy because capital turnover in transport is lumpy. That should not be mistaken for weakness. It is how real infrastructure transitions happen. There are also still real limits. Some ferry routes are long enough, exposed enough, or speed-sensitive enough that full battery-electric service is not the right near-term answer, although that window is expanding quickly. Some operators do not have the balance sheet for rapid fleet replacement. Some ports do not have the electrical capacity. Some regions do not have the shipyard slots. Some governments want the optics of a hydrogen pilot or a green-branded alternative fuel vessel even when the system case is thin. And public global data is still patchy enough that bold percentages should be treated with care. The right framing is not that electrification already owns the whole ferry orderbook. The right framing is that electrified propulsion has become a major and rising share of new ferry procurement, especially where route design and terminal power line up, while the rest of the market is still being sorted by engineering and institutional realities. Even with that caution, the direction of travel is clear. If there are 8,704 passenger ferries in the global fleet and 346 battery-equipped car and passenger ferries were already operational by May 2024, that implies battery-equipped vessels were already around 4% of that broad passenger ferry base even before a large amount of orderbook turnover and before counting every smaller passenger craft consistently. Add 98 on the orderbook from DNV’s tally and the visible pipeline alone represented another 1% to 1.1% of the fleet equivalent. Those numbers may not sound revolutionary until they are placed in shipping context. Maritime asset turnover is slow. A few hundred vessels in operation and another hundred on order in one niche means the technology is no longer speculative. If roughly two-fifths of ferry orders are now landing in battery-electric or battery-hybrid formats, then the center of gravity in newbuild thinking has moved even if the installed fleet remains mostly conventional. The reason ferries matter beyond their own market is that they show what transport decarbonization looks like when the technology is matched to the job instead of forced into a bad fit. Batteries are not the answer to every shipping segment. They do not need to be. They only need to be the right answer often enough to take over the routes where they clearly belong. Ferries are proving that point in real time. The global ferry market is still mostly diesel today, because large fleets do not flip overnight. But the build-out underway is not cosmetic. It is commercial, physical, and increasingly global. The earlier overstatement about 70% of orders having batteries was wrong. The corrected story is better. Ferry electrification is neither a fringe experiment nor a total victory lap. It is a serious industrial transition that already has enough vessels in the water, enough hardware on order, and enough infrastructure in planning to make clear where this part of maritime transport is headed.