SBS Trailers are unveiling electric boat launcher at Seawork
SBS Trailers will bring Tectrax’s C-ROVR electric boat launch system to Seawork 2026, offering remote-controlled launching without a tow vehicle.


The Clean Harbours Partnership has been looking at the release of metals, particularly Copper and Zinc, by recreational vessels into the marine environment. In 2020, the Institute of Marine Sciences at Portsmouth University calculated that approximately 900 tonnes of Zinc is released into UK coastal and inland waters by recreational vessels in an average year.
“The problem is metals do not degrade. They accumulate in the ocean and in sediment on the sea bed, where organisms at all levels in the food chain ingest them. Zinc anodes also contain Cadmium, which is harmful to marine life, whereas Aluminium does not,” explains James Collings Wells of the Clean Harbours Partnership. “Whilst Aluminium anodes are being used by some of the UK’s major boat manufacturers, evidently they are not being used widely enough. We are urging boat builders and boaters across the UK to switch to using Aluminium anodes.”
As well as being more environmentally friendly, aluminium anodes are lighter and longer lasting too. Clean Harbours Partnership advise that when changing from Zinc to Aluminium alloy, all external anodes should be replaced at the same time. However, this does not apply to zinc anodes in the engine water cooling system, if the two bodies of water are separate.
If an anode is eroding more quickly than expected, it’s worth looking for an electrical problem causing stray current. Addressing this would reduce the amount of metal shed by the anodes into the environment. Prolonged connection to shore power without a galvanic isolator can have the same effect.




SBS Trailers will bring Tectrax’s C-ROVR electric boat launch system to Seawork 2026, offering remote-controlled launching without a tow vehicle.


Plymouth Boat Fest 2026 will bring marine technology, leisure boating and live demonstrations to Mount Batten this June.


The historic Harmsworth Trophy has returned as an electric boat challenge, with the SpiritBARTech F35 setting the first Poole-Cowes benchmark.


Seawork 2026 will bring commercial marine expertise, technology, training and careers opportunities to Southampton from 9-11 June.