Norwegian Cruise Line to eliminate single-use plastic water bottles from its fleet by Jan. 1 2020
Published on by Water Guardian Research in Case Studies
Norwegian Cruise Line CEO on partnering with Jaden Smith-founded water company: ‘We’re taking the issue of the environment seriously’
Norwegian Cruise Line expects to eliminate single-use plastic water bottles from its fleet by Jan. 1 with the help of Jaden Smith-founded water company Just Goods.KEY POINTS
- “We’re taking the issue of the environment seriously,” Norwegian Cruise CEO Frank Del Rio tells Jim Cramer in a “Mad Money” interview.
- “We ply the ocean’s waters. We do everything we possibly can, through technology [and] through policy procedure, to prevent any kind of pollution in the water or in the air,” he says.
VIDEO01:23
Norwegian Cruise CEO: Purging plastic bottles with help of Jaden Smith firm
Norwegian Cruise Line is on a mission to be more eco-friendly by removing millions of single-use plastic water bottles from its fleet by Jan. 1, President and CEO Frank Del Rio told CNBC on Monday.
The company expects to replace more than 6 million plastic water bottles each year with refillable and recyclable plant-based cartons.
“We’re taking the issue of the environment seriously,” Del Rio said in a “Mad Money” interview with Jim Cramer conducted on the newly built ship Norwegian Encore. “We ply the ocean’s waters. We do everything we possibly can, through technology [and] through policy procedure, to prevent any kind of pollution in the water or in the air.”
The sustainability initiative is powered by Norwegian’s partnership with Just Goods, the sustainable packaging company founded by American recording artist and environmental activist Jaden Smith. Just Goods uses 100% spring water and its bottles are made mostly from renewable material, including trees and sugar cane, according to the company.
Norwegian teamed with Just Goods as part of the cruise line’s Sail & Sustain Environmental Program, which aims to reduce its carbon footprint and contribution to landfill waste. It follows a wave of companies in a range of industries looking to shore up their sustainability strategies as interest in socially responsible investing grows.
“We’re doing it as well on the Oceania region brands with Vero Water,” Del Rio added.
Oceania Cruises, one of three brands under Norwegian’s portfolio, spent 2019 outfitting its six ships with sparkling-water distillation systems from Vero Water in hopes of cutting use of three million plastic bottles annually.
The Norwegian brand sails 16 ships to almost 300 destinations around the world. The Norwegian Encore, which measures almost 1,100 feet long and can carry nearly 4,000 guests, will embark on its maiden voyage later this month with trips to the Caribbean on its schedule.
By Tyler Clifford@_TYLERTHETYLER_
SOURCE INCLUDING VIDEO ON CNBC ABOUT NORWEGIAN ELIMINATING SINGLE USE PLASTICS
Media
Taxonomy
- Water Transport
- Public Transportation
- Sustainable Transport
- Single-use plastic