Cruise ships more polluting than 260 MILLION European cars

A new report finds that ships operated by the world's largest luxury cruise operator emit nearly 10 times more sulphur oxide than all European cars.

Cruise ships more polluting than ALL European cars

Ships operated by the world’s largest luxury cruise operator emitted nearly 10 TIMES more sulphur oxide (SOx) around Europe’s coastline than all 260 million European cars in 2017.

Carnival Corporation, which operates 47 cruise ships, is the worst offender, followed by Roya Caribbean Cruises, the second largest operator, which emits SOx levels four times worse than the European car fleet.

This report by Transport & Environment revealed that Spain, Italy and Greece are the countries most at risk, followed by France and Norway. As major tourist destinations, these countries are exposed to dangerous levels of SOx air pollution from cruise liners, but less stringent marine sulphur fuel standards allow ships to burn the most sulphurous fuel along their coasts.

Aurora cruise ship Southampton

Closer to home, Southampton is named as the fifth most cruise ship-polluted European port, behind Barcelona, Palma Mallorca, Venice and Civitavecchia.

Some of the figures are startling. In Marseille, for example, the Transport & Environment report found that 57 cruise ships emitted as much nitrogen oxide (NOx) as one-quarter of the city’s 340,000 passenger cars in 2017.

In Norway, Denmark, Greece, Croatia and Malta, a handful of cruise ships are responsible for more NOx than the majority of their domestic car fleets.

Europe should implement a zero-emissions port standard, says the report, along with extending the emission control areas currently in place only in the North and Baltic Seas and the English Channel. 

‘This is unacceptable’

Costa Magica cruise ship Stockholm

Faig Abbasov, shipping policy manager at Transport & Environment, said: “Luxury cruise ships are floating cities powered by some of the dirtiest fuel possible. Cities are rightly banning dirty diesel cars but they’re giving a free pass to cruise companies that spew out toxic fumes that do immeasurable harm both to those on board and on nearby shores. This is unacceptable.“

“There are enough mature technologies to clean up cruise ships. Shore-side electricity can help cut in-port emissions, batteries are a solution for shorter distances and hydrogen technology can power even the biggest cruise ships. The cruise sector [is] apparently not willing to make the shift voluntarily, so we need governments to step in and mandate zero emissions standards.”

The Carnival Corporation brand portfolio includes Princess Cruises, Holland America Line, Seabourn, Cunard, AIDA Cruises, Costa and P&O Cruises. It also operates 25 ships under its own brand and carried over 4.7 million guests in 2016 – the most of any individual cruise brand.

Princess Cruises Bahamas

In 2016, Princess Cruises agreed to pay a $40 million penalty for illegally dumping oil-contaminated waste into the sea and attempts by employees to cover it up.

But the operator continued to pollute the seas, including the discharging of plastic into waters in the Bahamas. On Monday, Carnival and Princess were ordered to pay an additional $20 million penalty, reports the New York Times.

The company said: “Carnival Corporation remains committed to environmental excellence and protecting the environment in which we live, work and travel. Our aspiration is to leave the places we touch even better than when we first arrived.”

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Gavin Braithwaite-Smith
Gavin Braithwaite-Smithhttp://www.petrolblog.com
Writer with a penchant for #FrenchTat. Owns 15 vehicles of varying degrees of terribleness. Also doing a passable impression of Cousin Eddie in an Italian-German beige motorhome. Doesn't get out much.

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