NABU criticizes the industry: the most climate-friendly cruise ships come from Norway

NABU criticizes the industry
Most climate-friendly cruise ships come from Norway

Cruise ships are one of the most climate-damaging ways to travel. The transformation to climate neutrality is progressing slowly. However, not all providers are equally climate sinners. A German company even occupies third place in the new NABU ranking.

According to a study by the environmental organization NABU, the cruise industry, which was booming again after the corona pandemic, is only making slow progress in terms of climate protection. “It seems outdated that the majority of large ships are still using the particularly toxic but cheap heavy oil,” said NABU Federal Managing Director Leif Miller at the presentation of the 11. NABU cruise rankings 2023. The shipping expert of NABU, Sönke Diesener, also emphasized in Hamburg: “It is very welcome that the first ones have finally found a way towards climate neutrality.” However, the pace must increase significantly.

The industry association Clia, on the other hand, sees the shipping companies on the right track, as they want to offer carbon-free cruises worldwide by 2050. “This industry-wide ambition exceeds the goals set by governments at the national and international levels.” The cruise industry is already making huge investments to become one of the most sustainable forms of vacation travel, emphasized the association Cruise Lines International (Clia).

Sweden in first and second place

NABU surveyed 13 cruise providers that are relevant to German customers. Among other things, the topics of climate strategy, climate protection measures, shore power, nitrogen oxide catalysts and soot particle filters were discussed. The ranking is based on the information provided by the shipping companies, said Diesener. The Norwegian shipping companies Havila and Hurtigruten are in first and second place when it comes to measures to reduce emissions. The German shipping companies Aida Cruises, TUI Cruises and Hapag-Lloyd Cruises took third, fifth and ninth place. The cruise giant Carnival, with brands such as Carnival Cruise Line, Costa and Cunard, came in last place among the providers evaluated.

The Norwegians operate smaller ships, which are often better equipped and are subject to stricter regulations in their country, Diesener explained the good positions of these shipping companies. For the individual passengers, however, this does not mean that they are traveling in a climate-friendly manner. “If you can afford to go to Antarctica with 100 people – and everyone has a suite (…), you have a gigantic ecological footprint.” On the other hand, those who travel on an Aida ship with 6,000 passengers trimmed for energy efficiency are not doing well in comparison, but better off.

Far from climate neutral

“We’re still a long way from being carbon neutral, and we’re also a long way from being environmentally friendly,” emphasized Diesener. Because although emissions would have to be drastically reduced, they continued to rise. “Of particular concern is the sharp increase in methane emissions from LNG use.” These are over 80 times more harmful to the climate than CO2.

He was also annoyed with regard to the heavy oil quota of around 50 percent for cruise ships. The shipping companies could stop this immediately and without major modifications by using heavy-metal-free marine diesel. “No understanding,” complained the cruise expert. This puts the industry in last place in the entire civil shipping industry. Even container ships would only be operated with 18 percent heavy fuel oil.

Hamburg’s NABU boss Malte Siegert welcomed the agreement between some cruise lines and Hamburg to use shore power. However, the actual use is still too low and not mandatory. This joined Clia demands to build significantly more shore power infrastructure. But he also conceded that these systems are not trivial, a cruise ship, which is usually in port for 40 percent of the travel time, consumes as much electricity as a small town.

So far, many ships have kept their engines running in port to supply themselves with electricity – with the corresponding exhaust gases and CO2 emissions. According to Clia, emissions in the port alone “can account for between 6 and 10 percent of a cruise ship’s total CO2 emissions”.

source site-32