Viking Ocean Cruises announced the next two ships being added to its fleet would run on hydrogen and carry more guests than its other vessels built to date.
According to Cruise Critic, Chairman and Founder Torstein Hagen said the cruise line’s unnamed ocean-going ships will be longer than the existing vessels in the fleet to carry the hydrogen fuel.
The hydrogen-powered ships will measure 11 meters longer than their fleet mates, bolster no more than 25 additional cabins and limit the overall passenger count to less than 1,000. The vessel will be powered by a hybrid propulsion system based on liquid hydrogen and fuel cells.
Internally dubbed Ship 11 and Ship 12, Hagen said the vessels will be larger, but will feature most of the same elements, designs and options found throughout the cruise line’s fleet.
Hagen revealed the details of the hydrogen-powered ships during a sailing from the Caribbean to New York City on board Viking Octantis, the cruise line’s first expedition vessel. The new ship is preparing for its upcoming Great Lakes season.
Viking’s eighth, ninth and 10th ships in its fleet — Viking Mars, Viking Neptune and Viking Saturn — are scheduled for delivery by the end of 2023.
Last week, Viking announced it partnered with the University of Cambridge to establish a new Professorship aimed at advancing research in the field of polar environmental science. The Viking Polar Marine Geoscience Fund will endow the University's Scott Polar Research Institute with its first-ever fully funded professorship.
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