Thu 17 Dec 2015, 12:07 GMT

Eniram and Royal Caribbean discuss fuel-saving partnership


Eniram's technology currently reduces Royal Caribbean's fuel costs by an average of 4 percent.



Top-level executives at Finnish clean-tech software engineering firm Eniram and Miami-headquartered Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd recently discussed how the two firms have been working together to improve the energy efficiency of the cruise operator's fleet in order to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and cut fuel costs.

Eniram, which provides energy management technology and analytic services to the shipping industry, began optimizing the energy consumption of cruise vessels in 2005. The company now optimizes the operations of over 130 large cruise ships.

Discussing the cruise operator's partnership with Eniram at the tech event Slush 2015, held on November 11-12 in Helsinki, Finland, Harri Kulovaara, Executive Vice President of Maritime at Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, explained: "We are building new technologies from scratch. Regarding energy efficiency, we are cutting edge. Energy efficiency also means minimizing the environmental impact as a direct consequence of reduced fuel consumption."

Eniram's technology collects a vast amount of vessel onboard data during normal operation, using over a trillion measurement points. The data is then used to build a model based on the mathematical relationship between different performance elements.

"Based on that massive amount of data, we build mathematical relationships, we build a digital model to be able to really understand the different performance factors and how they affect each other; the relationship between all these elements," said Henrik Dahl, CEO of Eniram, at the Helsinki event.

Eniram's advanced technology brings real-time guidance to onboard personnel on the optimal speed at which to operate, what route to take, how to best trim the vessel and how much load the engines should have.

Guidance results are displayed in a user-friendly way on a screen using a 'traffic lights' system.

"On board of the vessel, we put something that is very simple - it's a traffic light to help the crew who has this massively complex operation there," Dahl explained.

A red light indicates the prompt need for action to restore optimal operations, a yellow light provides a warning on a negative trend in performance and a green light means that the the system is performing in an optimal way.

Eniram's collaboration with Royal Caribbean Cruises started in 2009. The initial anticipated savings were 2 percent; however, the first results came out at 0.6 percent. Currently, Eniram's energy management and optimization solution decreases fuel consumption by an average of 4 percent for Royal Caribbean's fleet; saving approximately $16 million in fuel costs and reducing CO2 emissions by 35,000 tonnes annually.

"Eniram is a great example of the type of companies with whom Royal Caribbean is partnering strongly. Eniram use technology and data mining to improve the operational efficiency of our vessels, and we are most pleased with the results so far," Kulovaara said.

"The emphasis will be on real-time management of the whole fleet of vessels, enabling a predictive capability for the crew to take measures. For example, if a vessel for any reason should deviate from the planned and forecasted performance, Eniram and Royal Caribbean, as well as the officers onboard will get instant notification. Royal Caribbean's shoreside specialists and Eniram's support team are able to identify the deviation online and assist the crew to solve the problem and get back on track," Dahl said.

"What we are doing is not about controlling the captains. It is rather about Eniram and Royal Caribbean together supporting the crew to make savings. It will be what Houston is for space crafts, indeed a command centre, but there for the officers onboard the vessels to provide support," Dahl added.

Both companies are looking to increase the savings from their cooperation to 10 percent.

"The potential is also perhaps more substantial and harder than the onboard optimization. Going from optimizing 40 vessels to a fleet involving over 50,000 people needs a completely different approach, especially as there are only 75 Eniramers. This is why the approach needs to be a joint partnership," Dahl remarked.

A link to a video of the on-stage discussion with Harri Kulovaara and Henrik Dahl at Slush 2015 has been provided below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fvgMoJRbBA


Nicklas Mikkelsen, Malik Supply. Malik Supply hires first trader for new Dubai office  

Nicklas Mikkelsen joins Danish bunker supplier ahead of January 2026 launch.

Tallink’s MyStar vessel. Tallink's MyStar joins Gasum's FuelEU Maritime compliance pool using bio-LNG  

Nordic energy company Gasum signs pooling agreement with Elenger to generate compliance surplus.

Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative (MAMII) speakers. Maritime coalition gathers in Brussels to advance methane measurement and abatement technologies  

MAMII convenes shipowners, engine makers, and policymakers to accelerate methane reduction from LNG-fueled vessels.

Green oil bubbles. BIMCO delays biofuel clause for time charters to spring 2026  

Maritime organisation pushes back publication to address safety, technical requirements, and industry feedback.

Group photo of participants at the REMPEC expert meeting. Mediterranean moves closer to nitrogen oxide emission controls  

Expert meeting endorses feasibility study with 2032 target for Med NOx ECA implementation.

Seaboard Venture naming ceremony. Sanfu Shipbuilding delivers final 3,500 TEU dual-fuel container ship to US owner  

Taizhou-based shipyard completes first batch of LNG-powered vessels with "zero accidents, zero delays".

Aerial view of a container vessel. FuelEU Maritime regulation reshapes ship management contracts, DNV says  

DNV's Emissions Connect aims to provide neutral data for commercial negotiations under new rules.

Illustration of Scales of Justice with cargo ship and penalty block. FuelEU penalties spark contract disputes as first-year compliance costs emerge  

Shipowners and charterers negotiate biofuel handling, payment timing, and multiplier penalties under new regulations.

Marina Bay Sands, Singapore. Singapore tops first global container port ranking by DNV and Menon Economics  

The port leads across all five assessment pillars in inaugural industry report.

Jack Spyros Pringle, Lloyd’s Register. Marine fuel procurement becomes strategic imperative as regulatory pressures mount: LR  

Operators must adopt comprehensive fuel strategies amid supply constraints and compliance costs, says Lloyd's Register.