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The least environmentally friendly cruise companies ranked – with passenger favourites near bottom

Simon Calder’s Travel

Five cruise lines under the Carnival brand have been named by an eco group as the least environmentally friendly cruise companies, such as failing to deliver in how it treats its onboard sewage and reduce air pollution.

Environmental organisation Friends of the Earth sifted through 243 cruise ships operated by 21 cruise lines worldwide and ranked them based on four criteria.

The organisation looked at how ships treated their sewage and graywater through what advanced systems it installed instead of dumping treated sewage into the water.

It looked at whether a cruise line has retrofitted its ships to “plug in” to shoreside electrical grids instead of running its engines when docked or if it uses low sulfur fuel, to reduce air pollution.

Friends of the Earth also checked if the ships use scrubbers, an exhaust gas cleaning device that “converts air pollution into toxic wastewater”.

Sulphur emitted by ships can be processed by a scrubber, which in turn discharges as a liquid which contains pollutant properties which have been found to pose a risk to sea life.

The organisation also ranked the companies as well on whether it was transparent, responding to its request for information.

At the bottom of the table, with average grades of ‘F’ were brands all under the Carnival name: Seabourn, Cunard, Carnival Cruise Lines, P&O Cruises and Costa Cruises.

The organisation said that the luxury Seabourn line, which was more environmentally friendly than some of the others in the five, did have advanced sewage systems, but failed to deliver in reducing air pollution as five of its ships’ exhausts were fitted with scrubbers.

P&O Cruises were found to have four out of its seven ships with advanced sewage systems, but the organisation says two of its ships burn liquefied natural gas fuel, which emits a lot of greenhouse gas emissions.

Costa similarly, only has two out of its nine ships fitted with sewage systems that are better for the environment, but eight of its ships were found to have exhaust gas scrubbers.

The luxury cruise company Cunard was also awarded an F by the organisation, finding that only one out of its four ships, the Queen Mary 2, could plug into shore power hookups, but all four did have advanced sewage systems, giving them a C grade in that aspect.

Carnival Cruise Line also came in joint fifth…

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