In-water hull cleaning is often treated as a necessary operational response to heavy fouling. However, when cleaning is performed reactively (after macrofouling is established) it typically requires aggressive mechanical force. The result is not just fouling removal, but coating damage, increased roughness, higher fuel consumption, and long-term economic and environmental consequences.
This page explains:
Biofouling develops in stages:
Once calcareous macrofouling is established, removal requires high mechanical force. According to Swain et al. (2022), reactive in-water cleaning is typically performed “once fouling has reached significant levels” and requires “powerful machinery which damages the coatings” .
The key problem:
Removing hard fouling requires forces high enough to exceed the cohesive or adhesive strength of the coating surface.
This can lead to:
Hull coatings are engineered systems:
Abrasive cleaning disrupts both systems.
Swain et al. (2022) document that reactive cleaning results in:
When coating surface integrity is compromised, hydrodynamic roughness increases. Even small increases in equivalent sand-grain roughness (ks) significantly increase frictional resistance.
The IMO GloFouling report (2022) clearly connects hull roughness to increased hydrodynamic drag, fuel consumption, and GHG emissions .
Resistance increase is not linear. As surface roughness increases:
Even light slime can cause measurable efficiency penalties. Macrofouling and coating roughness increase the penalty substantially .
The economic impact of biofouling has been rigorously quantified.
Schultz et al. (2011) analyzed the cost impact of hull fouling on a U.S. Navy destroyer and found:
The implication is critical:
Any cleaning method that increases long-term hull roughness increases lifetime fuel cost.
Abrasive reactive cleaning may remove fouling—but if it increases coating roughness, it embeds an ongoing fuel penalty. EverClean is an approved hull grooming solution for use with GIT Coatings and Chugoku Marine Paints.
Reactive cleaning can also shorten coating service life.
Swain et al. (2022) highlight that cleaning after calcareous fouling develops requires “fairly high forces that may damage the coating” .
This damage can result in:
In contrast, proactive grooming was defined as:
“Gentle, habitual and frequent mechanical maintenance… with minimal impact to the coating” .
The distinction is force threshold and frequency.
Reactive abrasive cleaning has several environmental consequences:
Damaged coatings can release:
Swain et al. (2022) note that reactive cleaning can produce excessive discharge requiring capture and disposal in some jurisdictions .
Roughened surfaces increase fuel burn. The IMO GloFouling analysis shows that unmanaged biofouling can increase GHG emissions significantly depending on severity .
Waiting until macrofouling establishes increases the risk of species transport between regions .
Research at the Naval Postgraduate School (Royster, 2022) evaluated proactive grooming frequencies across temperature and biome conditions. The study found that:
The key technical insight:
There is a narrow “grooming zone” where fouling can be removed without exceeding coating damage thresholds.
Reactive cleaning operates outside this zone. Proactive grooming, such as EverClean, operates within it.
Service reports from reactive cleanings frequently document:
For example, a 2022 hull cleaning report documented paint in “POOR condition showing severe worn out and detachment” in areas heavily fouled .
When macrofouling must be mechanically removed from an already degraded coating, coating life is further compromised.
Reactive, abrasive hull cleaning creates a cascade of consequences:
|
Step |
Result |
|---|---|
|
Fouling allowed to reach macro stage |
High-force removal required |
|
High-force cleaning |
Coating damage |
|
Coating damage |
Increased roughness |
|
Increased roughness |
Higher fuel consumption |
|
Higher fuel consumption |
Increased OPEX and emissions |
|
Coating wear |
Shortened service life |
In contrast, proactive, low-force grooming: