Earthrace: fastest, greenest powerboat coming home
6th April 2009
Earthrace – fastest and greenest powerboat coming home with world record
Earthrace due in
Evans Bay on Friday 17th April.
Open to the public and
media 12noon – 6pm.
Lunchtime talk with Pete Bethune
at Evans Bay Yacht and Motorboat Club at 12:30pm.
Earthrace due in Mana Marina on Thursday 16th April.
Open to the public and media 12 noon – 7pm.
Evening talk with Pete Bethune at Mana Cruising Club at
8pm.
The amazing New Zealand built and skippered 100%
biofuelled Earthrace powerboat smashed the previously
British-held Round the World Speed Record by almost two
weeks in June 2008. Now, she’s arrived home in New Zealand
and will be in Evans Bay where she will be open to the
public, and the crew will be on hand to talk about the
adventures and challenges they’ve faced along the way.
It has been almost three years since she left New Zealand, and her crew have had a roller-coaster ride of adventures and challenges since then. This is reflected in the boat itself, which these days resembles more a battle scarred warrior than a princess. Bullet holes, gouges from logs, and damage from an accident of the Guatemalan coast have all left their mark on this amazing, storm-hardened vessel.
More than 180,000 people have walked onto to her decks during her world tour, and the story of her volunteer crew and their journey to promote renewable fuels and sustainable living has been seen by millions on TV networks, and in newspapers and magazines around the globe.
The boat broke the ten year old world circumnavigation record using only biofuel from sustainable sources as a way of drawing attention to, and fuelling debate about, renewable fuels.
Earthrace broke the previous record, held by British boat, Cable and Wireless Adventurer, by almost two weeks when she crossed the finish line in Spain at 12.24GMT on 27th June this year. The team took just 60 days 23 hours and 49 minutes to complete the world’s longest speed challenge of almost 24,000 nautical miles.
The boat and her crew had to overcome many obstacles including huge storms, replacing a propeller in Singapore, losing an engine in the middle of the ocean, fuel leakages, a huge backlog of traffic in the Panama Canal and a depressing journey through an offshore rubbish dump in the North Pacific.
After this current tour stop, Earthrace will continue on her tour around New Zealand. For the full itinerary visit www.earthrace.net.
ENDS
PUBLIC INFORMATION
www.earthrace.net