Skip to main content
×

GE.com has been updated to serve our three go-forward companies.

Please visit these standalone sites for more information

GE Aerospace | GE Vernova | GE HealthCare 

Press Release

GE Aeroderivative Marine Gas Turbines Log More Than 320,000 Service Hours Aboard 16 cruise Ships

March 15, 2005

March 15, 2005 -- MIAMI, Fla. - GE announced that its fleet of 25 aeroderivative marine gas turbines has accumulated more than 320,000 hours operating aboard 16 cruise ships. GE remains the only gas turbine manufacturer to have its engines in service on cruise ships, the company reported today at the Seatrade Cruise Shipping Convention.
"We are setting a new reliability standard in the cruise industry for propulsion and onboard power," said Karl Matson, general manager of GE Transportation's marine business, Evendale, Ohio. "There has not been a single port arrival or departure missed due to the GE engines on any of the 16 cruise ships currently in service, thanks to the superior performance of the LM2500 and LM2500+ gas turbines."
Configurations
The GE gas turbines now in service are configured in two different types of arrangements: 16 LM2500+ gas turbines are the basis for a COmbined Gas turbine and steam turbine integrated Electric drive System (COGES) used aboard four Celebrity Cruises and four Royal Caribbean International cruise ships; and six LM2500+ and three LM2500 gas turbines are used in COmbined Diesel And Gas turbine (CODAG) arrangements aboard four Princess Cruises, one Cunard Line and three Holland American Line cruise ships. In 2006, an additional LM2500 gas turbine will begin service in a CODAG system on Holland America Line's Noordam cruise ship.

See a separate fact sheet that lists the GE gas turbines, cruise ships, and type of configurations.

Rick Kennedy
GE Aviation
[email protected]
+1 513 243 3372
+1 513 607 0609


business unit
tags