The Eco-friendly Cruising Solution is Here

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  • French shipyard Chantiers de l’Atlantique is planning to construct cruise ships topped by striking 80-meter “eco-friendly” paneled sails, made of fiberglass and carbon.
  • The Solid Sail/AeolDrive concept would reduce cruise emissions by up to 50%, according to the shipyard.
  • The sail’s mast can also rotate and tilt, which the shipyard says will allow cruise ships to sail under bridges — including those lining the Panama Canal.

A recent news article published in the Philadelphia Tribune reveals that eco-friendly cruise ships to be powered by sails.

MSC Grandiosa and Celebrity Apex

Chantiers de l’Atlantique — behind top vessels including MSC Grandiosa and Celebrity Apex — talked through the concept at an event this week, streamed live from the MSC Virtuosa, a still-to-be-inaugurated cruise ship also built at the yard.

Laurent Castaing, General Manager of Chantiers de l’Atlantique said that the team had long pinpointed sails as an eco-friendly cruising solution. However, cruise ships need large sails, which the team found tricky to construct with existing technology and fabrics.

So the shipyard decided something new and different was required.

The resulting design resembles, as the shipyard puts it, “an accordion,” with folding panels that make up a sailing rig to be used in tandem with an engine and propellers — so it’s not totally reliant on strong winds.

The sail’s mast can also rotate and tilt, which the shipyard says will allow cruise ships to sail under bridges — including those lining the Panama Canal.

Testing phase

The design recalls other eco-friendly sailing vessels that have made waves in recent years, from Oceanco’s Black Pearl, renowned for its three jet black sails and winner of the Superyacht Awards Sailing Yacht of the Year in 2019, to transatlantic car carrier Oceanbird, a vessel fueled by five collapsible sails.

Chantiers de l’Atlantique reckons the Solid Sail/AeolDrive could also work for the superyacht market, but it’s been designed with cruise ships in mind, as the Silenseas rendering demonstrates.

The cruise industry is currently in something of a stalemate in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, with many cruise companies suffering financial losses and the future of cruising still uncertain.

Cruise ships remain under construction, however, and there’s apparently industry interest in Chantiers de l’Atlantique’s sailing concept.

For one, back in 2020, MSC Cruises signed a contract to partner with Chantiers de l’Atlantique on upcoming projects, including the development of sail-fueled cruise ships.

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Source: The Philadelphia Tribune