Fri 1 Dec 2017 16:07

One-year countdown: world's first fully LNG-fuelled cruise ship to set sail in Dec 2018


The AIDAnova is due to depart for the Canary Islands on Dec 2 next year.



The one-year countdown to the maiden operation of the world's first fully LNG-powered cruise ship, the AIDAnova, starts this week, with the vessel due to depart from Germany for the first time on December 2, 2018.

On its maiden voyage, the cruise ship is scheduled to set sail from Hamburg to the Canary Islands - which suggests that the Spanish island is another location where the cruise operator aims to be able to perform LNG bunkering before the end of next year.

As Bunker Index previously reported, Meyer celebrated the keel-laying ceremony for the AIDAnova on September 4.

This Saturday (December 2), the second and last engine room module for the AIDAnova - which was manufactured by the Neptun shipyard in Rostock Warnemunde - will begin its journey to the Meyer shipyard in Papenburg.

The second floating part, a so-called floating engine room unit (FERU), is 120 metres long and 42 metres wide. The four-deck-tall component contains three LNG tanks. Two of the tanks are both just shy of 35 metres in length, with a diameter of eight meters and a volume capacity of 1,550 cubic metres (cbm) each.

A third and smaller tank with a diameter of five meters is 28 meters in length and has a volume capacity of approximately 520 cbm.

A twin 180,000-gross-tonne (grt) ship - also able to operate on LNG both in port and at sea - is slated for completion in 2021.

Earlier this week, parent company Carnival Corporation confirmed that another AIDA Cruises vessel, the AIDAperla, will be supplied with LNG while docked at the Mediterranean ports of Barcelona (Spain), Marseille (France) and Civitavecchia (Italy). Carnival says it is also currently in discussion with authorities in Palma de Mallorca (Spain).

The AIDAperla's twin ship, AIDAprima, has also bunkered with LNG in Southampton (UK), Le Havre (France), Zeebrugge (Belgium) and Rotterdam (Netherlands).

Opening of the IMO Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC), 83rd Session, April 7, 2025. IMO approves pricing mechanism based on GHG intensity thresholds  

Charges to be levied on ships that do not meet yearly GHG fuel intensity reduction targets.

Preemraff Göteborg, Preem's wholly owned refinery in Gothenburg, Sweden. VARO Energy expands renewable portfolio with Preem acquisition  

All-cash transaction expected to complete in the latter half of 2025.

Pictured: Biofuel is supplied to NYK Line's Noshiro Maru. The vessel tested biofuel for Tohoku Electric Power in a landmark first for Japan. NYK trials biofuel in milestone coal carrier test  

Vessel is used to test biofuel for domestic utility company.

Pictured (from left): H-Line Shipping CEO Seo Myungdeuk and HJSC CEO Yoo Sang-cheol at the contract signing ceremony for the construction of an 18,000-cbm LNG bunkering vessel. H-Line Shipping orders LNG bunkering vessel  

Vessel with 18,000-cbm capacity to run on both LNG and MDO.

Stanley George, VPS Group Technical and Science Manager, VPS. How to engineer and manage green shipping fuels | Stanley George, VPS  

Effective management strategies and insights for evolving fuel use.

Sweden flag with water in background. Swedish government bans scrubber wastewater discharges  

Discharges from open-loop scrubbers to be prohibited in Swedish waters from July 2025.

The ME-LGIA test engine at MAN's Research Centre Copenhagen. MAN Energy Solutions achieves 100% load milestone for ammonia engine  

Latest tests validate fuel injection system throughout the entire load curve.

Terminal Aquaviário de Rio Grande (TERIG), operated by Transpetro. Petrobras secures ISCC EU RED certification for B24 biofuel blend at Rio Grande  

Blend consisting of 24% FAME is said to have been rigorously tested to meet international standards.

Avenir LNG logo on sea background. Stolt-Nielsen to fully control Avenir LNG with acquisition  

Share purchase agreement to buy all shares from Golar LNG and Aequitas.

Seaspan Energy's 7,600 cbm LNG bunkering vessel, s1067, built by Nantong CIMC Sinopacific Offshore & Engineering Co., Ltd. Bureau Veritas supports launch of CIMC SOE's LNG bunkering vessel  

Handover of Seaspan Energy's cutting-edge 7,600-cbm vessel completed.


↑  Back to Top