Royal Caribbean Group joins a growing roster of members of the Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative (MAMII)
A statement said the company is expected to provide valuable insights and support MAMII’s ongoing efforts to develop and implement effective methane emissions-reduction strategies across the maritime industry.
Addressing methane emissions is a key priority for the sector; as transitional fuels such as LNG are increasingly adopted, leaders are focused on reeducing methane emissions to reduce the environmental impact of the value chain. Established in 2022, and led by Safetytech Accelerator, MAMII unites industry leaders, technology innovators, and maritime stakeholders to develop technologies that monitor, measure and mitigate methane emissions from LNG-powered ships.
Royal Caribbean Group joins a growing roster of members including BP, CMA CGM, GTT, Lloyd’s Register, Capital Gas, MSC, NYK Lines and Shell.
Safetytech Accelerator programme director Steve Price commented, “Methane abatement is an urgent challenge as we work to reduce the maritime sector’s environmental impact. Methane’s significant contribution to climate warming makes this an issue we cannot overlook. With Royal Caribbean Group on board, we gain a partner that shares our determination to drive innovation and collaboration in addressing this critical issue.”
“We are excited to join industry leaders and collaborate on the MAMII initiative, which we believe will play a critical role in information sharing and tool development needed to manage methane emissions,” said Royal Caribbean Group executive vice president and head of marine Palle Laursen. “We are committed to industry collaboration and partnerships like this are key to achieve Destination Net Zero, our decarbonisation strategy to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.”
MAMII recently published a report examining the scale of methane slip in LNG-fuelled vessels and the technologies available to tackle it. The report serves as a call to action for industry leaders to join the effort in combating methane emissions.




