As the cruise industry embraces LNG, the conversation has shifted from feasibility to methane slip. Advances in engine technology, independent validation, and real-world operations show LNG becoming a credible, scalable fuel for passenger shipping. When methane slip is effectively reduced, LNG-fuelled cruise ships can enjoy a longer regulatory compliance window than any other fossil-based marine fuel today.

Not so long ago, LNG in cruise still felt like a question mark.

When Icon of the Seas entered service, the significance went well beyond the headlines. Running a vessel of that complexity on LNG removed any remaining ambiguity about scale.

The same applies across MSC Cruises’ LNG fleet. Euribia, World Europa and World America operate on demanding itineraries, calling at busy ports, and exposed to the ever increasing scrutiny faced by the sector. LNG is not an auxiliary choice on these ships.

Once LNG is operating at this level, the discussion shifts. The question is no longer whether it can support cruise operations. It is how its performance can be refined.

Methane slip is no longer an abstract issue

For LNG, refinement has focused on one issue above all others: methane slip.

Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas. Even small quantities escaping unburned during combustion attract attention, and rightly so as methane is a potent greenhouse gas.

To better understand the facts of methane slip levels of ships in service various ship operators have initiated measurement campaigns. Independent measurements from LNG-fuelled cruise vessels show methane slip consistently below the default values still used in the regulatory frameworks. Brittany Ferries’ Salamanca recorded an annual average methane-slip coefficient of 1.57 percent. Earlier in-service cruise studies reported around 1.7 percent. These figures sit well below default assumptions still used in regulatory frameworks, which are intentionally conservative.

What changes with the next engine generation

The next phase of LNG performance in cruise is being shaped by engines designed explicitly around these operating realities.

MSC’s World Asia will be the first cruise ship to feature Wärtsilä 46TS-DF engines equipped with NextDF technology, pushing methane slip to levels once thought unattainable. Two-stage turbocharging of the 46TS-DF engine boosts efficiency across the full load range, and sets a new benchmark for low methane slip. To go even further, one engine will benefit from Wärtsilä’s NextDF technology, which can reduce methane slip to as low as 1.1% across a wide load range.

Wärtsilä’s NextDF technology is also available on the Wärtsilä 31DF and Wärtsilä 25DF engines, enabling mid-sized and smaller LNG-fuelled cruise ships to further reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Renewable LNG moves from theory to practice

Some cruise operators are already beginning to test renewable drop-in fuels. In July 2025, TUI Cruises’ Mein Schiff Relax completed a ship-to-ship bio-LNG bunkering operation via a barge at the Port of Barcelona. Powered by Wärtsilä 46DF engines, the vessel demonstrated that renewable methane can be used directly within existing LNG systems and infrastructure. Bio-LNG, which recycles carbon which is already part of the natural carbon cycle, can reduce emissions by up to 80% compared with traditional marine fuels like HFO.

This compatibility is central to LNG’s long-term value. As bio-LNG and synthetic LNG become more widely available, existing LNG vessels can use them without modification, extending future compliance pathways.

Regulation related to methane slip and LNG is evolving, as the EU now permits shipowners to use actual methane slip values instead of only default factors, enabling those who invest in new technologies – and achieve lower slip – to gain more accurate recognition and reduce their emission cost. While significant advancements have been made, many regulatory frameworks have traditionally used default factors that may not fully capture the enhanced performance of today’s modern engines.

For cruise operators planning decades ahead, recognising real-world performance is not academic. It shapes fuel strategy and investment decisions.

With LNG-powered vessels entering service across the Icon, Oasis, InTUItion, Sphere and World classes, this is no longer an isolated trend. It is becoming the norm.

In cruise, LNG is increasingly being defined by measured performance rather than assumptions.