Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumRoyal Caribbean Launches 8,000-Passenger, 250,000-Ton Cruise Ship With Much Talk Of "Sustainability"
On Tuesday, in a ceremony that, of course, involved a soccer ball, the Argentine soccer superstar Lionel Messi pressed a button and a bottle of champagne smashed against the bow of Icon of the Seas, christening the worlds largest cruise ship at its home port of Miami. Like an A-list celebrity stepping onto the red carpet, the arrival of Royal Caribbeans 250,800-ton ship has captured the worlds attention, with some marveling over its cutting-edge features, like the largest water park at sea, while others criticize the gigantic ships potential to damage the environment.
With the capacity to carry nearly 8,000 people, the 20-deck, 1,198-foot-long vessel whose inaugural cruise with paying passengers departs Jan. 27 is the size of a small city. There are eight neighborhoods packed with amenities that include a 55-foot waterfall, six water slides and more than 40 restaurants, bars and entertainment venues.
According to Royal Caribbean, the ship, which is registered in the Bahamas, also sets a new standard for sustainability with the use of energy-efficient technology designed to minimize the ships carbon footprint and move closer to the companys goal of introducing a net-zero ship by 2035.
We live by one single philosophy, which is to deliver the best vacations responsibly, said Nick Rose, the vice president of environmental stewardship at Royal Caribbean Group. And to do that we build with the core principles of sustaining our planet and communities.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/23/travel/icon-of-the-seas-cruise-ship-sustainability.html
snowybirdie
(5,651 posts)cruising. Live close to ports. But we'd never, ever consider a ship this size. 8,000 plus people all getting on and off the damn thing would be horrendous! Crowds everywhere. Not to mention the spread of disease among all these people. Ships today are so big, folks with mobility problems can't walk that much. The industry is driving away many people and we'll stay home. Bah humbug!