Norwegian
cruise operator Hurtigruten plans to use dead fish to power some of its ships,
it said on Monday, as it seeks to reduce its pollution and climate change
impact.
Leftover
dead fish from Norway's large fishing industry will be mixed with other organic
waste to make a liquified biogas to be used instead of heavy fuel oil, said
Hurtigruten, which runs cruises to the Arctic and Antarctica, among other
locations.
"What
others see as a problem, we see as a resource and a solution," the
company's chief executive Daniel Skjeldam said.
"By
introducing biogas as fuel for cruise ships, Hurtigruten will be the first
cruise company to power ships with fossil-free fuel," he added.
The first
biogas ship could be ready as soon as the end of next year, according to
spokesman Rune Thomas Ege.
The company
aims to have six of its 17 ships capable of using a combination of biogas,
batteries and liquified natural gas, the cleanest of fossil fuels, by 2021.
Norway,
which already has buses that run on biogas, has large fishing and forestry industries
which produce vast amounts of organic waste.
The
announcement comes as the cruise sector faces heavy criticism for its climate
footprint and its impact on air quality.
A large
cruise ship powered by highly-polluting heavy fuel oil emits almost as many
fine particles daily as one million cars, according to German environmental
group Nabu.
On Monday,
a French court fined cruise company P&O and its US captain 100,000 euros
($114,000) for knowingly using fuel with excessive sulphur levels, the first
such ruling in France.
Norway has
a "zero emission" target for cruise ships and ferries navigating its
fjords listed as world heritage sites by UNESCO by 2026 at the latest.
Hurtigruten,
which aims to become carbon neutral by 2050, has ordered three hybrid
battery/diesel vessels which the company said will be "the first cruise
ships in the world that will be able to operate completely emission free for
periods of time".
The spokesman
said that is "and something deemed almost impossible just a few years
back".
The first
of those three ships should enter into service in May 2019.
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