Thu 28 Oct 2010, 12:32 GMT

Fuel-saving ship delivered to Royal Caribbean


Allure of the Seas uses common-rail technology to achieve lower fuel consumption and reduced emissions.



Allure of the Seas, the sister ship of Oasis of the Seas [pictured], will today be handed over to Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCCL) by STX Europe's shipyard in Turku, Finland. The vessel uses common-rail system technology in order to achieve lower fuel consumption and reduced emissions.

The 361 meter long ultra modern vessel is powered by six Wärtsilä 46 engines, including three 12-cylinder and three 16-cylinder Wärtsilä 46 engines in V-configuration, and Wärtsilä 7500-horsepower bow thrusters with a combined power output of some 20 MW that make the vessel easy to manoeuvre.

Over the decades, Royal Caribbean International has had several of the world's most innovative ships in its fleet, and as its partnership with Wärtsilä stretches back 40 years, most of the vessels have been powered by Wärtsilä engines.

The delivery of Allure of the Seas comes only 12 months after the delivery of Oasis of the Seas, which was also powered by Wärtsilä engines.

"Allure of the Seas is Oasis' sister ship, with the same propulsion setup, the same thrusters, and the same specifications," said Fred Danska, Director, Cruise Business at Wärtsilä.

Allure of the Seas is 361 metres long, has the gross tonnage of 225,000, has 2700 staterooms, 16 decks and can accommodate about 6400 guests and a crew of 2200. She has 21 swimming pools and whirlpools, 24 restaurants, a floating park with 12,000 plants and more than 2600 theatre seats.

Like Oasis, the Wärtsilä engines installed in Allure also have common-rail injection. Combined with electronic control, this means that the fuel injection's timing, profile and duration can all be controlled accurately and even take place in stages, to provide improved low-speed operation, better load control and longer periods between overhauls.

Wärtsilä common rail systems also aim to ensure better combustion at all operating speeds and loads, lower fuel consumption, reduced NOx emissions and a reduction in exhaust emissions - giving smokeless operation at various engineloads.

"In engines of older design, it is practically impossible to optimize the fuel injection characteristics for different loads and different fuels," Wärtsilä points out.

Solid and long partnership

Wärtsilä has long and extensive experience in providing propulsion solutions for some of the world's most innovative cruise ships.

"What is truly remarkable is the long partnership between Wärtsilä and Royal Caribbean International," said Danska. "We've worked together since the Song of Norway days." The cruise ship referred to was built at what was then the Wärtsilä shipyard in Helsinki, and delivered to Royal Caribbean in October 1970. Cooperation evolved into an agreement signed between the two companies in 2000.

"Our relationship is built on a solid foundation of trust and transparency, the essential prerequisite for a long-term partnership. We work very hard to truly understand both our customers' businesses and the needs of their customers. We've always done what is needed to be the forerunner in technological development: we were the first to implement common-rail technology in ships, and we are also at the cutting edge with emission-reduction technologies," said Danska.

As they are sister ships, the positive news about Allure of the Seas is that changes to the specifications of the equipment installed on Oasis have not been required. The feedback that Wärtsilä has received about Oasis' first 12 months in operation is said to have been 'good'.

"The experience we have gained from Oasis has been really good, everything has worked fine and the loadings have been optimal for the engines installed on the vessel," said Danska. Getting it right first time is good news because with only a year between the deliveries of these two gigantic ships, making changes to the installed technologies would have been less than welcome."


Svitzer Balder vessel. Battery-methanol harbour tug completes sea trials ahead of Gothenburg deployment  

Svitzer Balder is claimed to be the most powerful electric escort tug in the world.

Launching ceremony of Nave Orbit vessel. Changhong International launches fourth LR2 tanker for Navios  

Chinese shipbuilder floats 115,000-tonne LR2/Aframax product tanker with methanol and LNG conversion capability.

Nippon Yuka Kogyo logo. Nippon Yuka Kogyo launches lubrication oil analysis service for ammonia-fuelled engines  

Japanese company offers condition monitoring service to support adoption of ammonia as a marine fuel.

Steel cutting ceremony of vessel with builder's hull no. S1128. CIMC Pacific Offshore Engineering advances two 20,000-cbm LNG bunkering vessel projects  

Two sister vessels for Singapore and Luxembourg owners reach construction milestones in China.

MPA and SSA logo side by side. Singapore maritime sector to accelerate AI adoption under new partnership  

MPA and SSA sign MOU to support AI implementation across shipping operations and bunkering.

Aerial view of a ship-to-ship (STS) transfer operation. Portland Port receives licence for LNG ship-to-ship transfer operations  

UK port can now support direct LNG transfers, reducing transit times and streamlining logistics operations.

Martin White, CEO of Stream Marine Group. Seafarer training must match pace of alternative fuel adoption, says Stream Marine Training  

Training provider highlights regulatory gap as methanol, ammonia and hydrogen gain traction in shipping.

Anji Luck vessel. Jiangnan Shipyard delivers final methanol-ready car carrier to Anji Logistics  

The 9,500-vehicle capacity vessel completes a 12-ship series built for SAIC’s logistics arm since 2022.

Bunker vessel alongside a ship during fuel transfer. Nippon Biofuel secures METI funding for Africa-based marine biofuel supply chain  

Japanese company to establish Jatropha cultivation and biofuel production facilities in Mozambique and Ghana.

Everllence B&W 6G60ME-LGIA HPSCR engine. Everllence’s ammonia-fuelled engine passes factory acceptance test ahead of October delivery  

Engine built by HHI-EMD will power Eastern Pacific Shipping’s very large ammonia carriers.