How Waste Is Dealt With On The World's Largest Cruise Ship

This cruise ship is
basically a floating city.

And just like in a normal city,

all its residents produce a lot of trash.

But there aren't any garbage trucks here

to scoop it up and take it away.

We're at sea, obviously.

And since waste can't and shouldn't

just be dumped in the ocean,

well, what do cruise
ships do with all of it?

This is something the industry's

been dealing with for years.

Reporter: Carnival Cruise
Line is coming clean

about polluting oceans.

Narrator: Princess Cruises
was fined $40 million

in 2016 for illegal dumping,

and Carnival got hit with
a $20 million fine in 2019

for disposing of plastic
waste in the ocean.

Stewart Chiron: Carnival
Corporation's issues

really brought the need
for better technology

so that these ships can
operate more efficiently.

Narrator: Cruise lines have
been working on systems

to purify water and deal
with waste inside ships.

Chiron: Up until now, these types

of options weren't available.

Narrator: All this new tech was built

into Royal Caribbean's
largest and newest ship,

Symphony of the Seas.

The company says it's
a zero-landfill ship,

which means it uses
everything from recycling

to water filtration to
deal with its own waste.

And this guy's in charge of making sure

no single water bottle is unaccounted for.

Alex Mago: Welcome to
waste and recycling center.

Narrator: We're down on deck two,

a secret, crew-only area of the ship.

Crew members check all
the ship's trash cans

for recyclables and bring them down here

for Alex's team to handle.

Despite being the only waste facility

on this massive ship,
it's surprisingly quiet.

Alex said the busiest
time is in the morning,

when things are unpackaged for the day.

Mago: This is the waste
streams that we have.

Every waste stream has its
own way of handling it.

Narrator: There are
separate teams to deal with

each incoming recyclable:

glass, cardboard, plastic, and metal.

Mago: This is our incinerator room.

So, we have two incinerators, one and two.

This area is manned 24 hours a day.

We have 10 crew members
who are working here,

five in the morning and
five in the evening.

Narrator: Crew members
separate glass into colors:

green, brown, and white.

[glass clinking]

Mago: This is the byproduct of it

after we crush it.

Narrator: They can process upwards

of 13,000 pounds of glass

for a weeklong cruise.

All the small glass
pieces are stored in bins

until the ship docks.

Plastic goes through
this massive compactor.

Even though the ship's
gotten rid of plastic straws,

it still relies on bottled water because,

for health and safety reasons,

no cruise ship is allowed
to have water fountains.

So, every week, they crush about

528 gallons of water bottles.

Mago: We are compacting
the cardboard over there.

Narrator: Throughout the
day, cardboard is stacked up

in this machine, called a baler.

Once it's full, it's all
compressed into bundles.

And used aluminum cans,

well, they're sent through this baler.

The machine squeezes
them down into big cubes,

which are then stored in a fridge

just off the waste room.

Mago: This area is actually for the items

that can produce smell, the garbage.

Narrator: And the smell
could get pretty bad.

The waste is stored for up
to seven days at a time,

until the ship docks back in Miami,

where all the plastic, aluminum, paper,

and glass go to recycling
partner facilities.

In 2018, Royal Caribbean recycled

43.7 million pounds of waste.

And any rebates earned from
these recycling programs

go back to the employee retirement fund.

The cruise line is hoping that it's a nice

incentive for employees
to bring recycling down

from their own crew cabins.

So, what about things
that can't get recycled?

For example, food.

Every week, the ship loads up

600,000 pounds of provisions.

But for the food that's not eaten,

well, the company had to figure out

how to get rid of all of that, too.

Each one of the ship's restaurants

and 36 kitchens has its own suction drain.

Chefs and waiters keep food
scraps in separate buckets.

Then, once they've gotten enough,

they place it all in this special drain.

All the food waste ends up in one big pipe

that runs through the entire ship.

And that pipe leads to what's known

as the hydro-processor.

Mago: Those pipes over there,

so, this is where

the food waste is passing through.

This is being processed through here.

Narrator: This machine
has a bunch of tiny layers

of mesh to break down the food.

Mago: It's being stored in our tank.

We have two tanks of
comminuted food waste.

Narrator: And the final step?

Incineration.

Now, let's talk about your toilet waste.

Yep, we're gonna go there.

It's all a part of the
water-treatment system on board,

controlled from the engineering room.

Narrator: Water is divided
into two categories:

gray water, from sinks,
laundries, and drains,

and black water.

That includes everything from the galleys

and your toilets, including your urine.

Narrator: The purification
system purifies the water

to a point above the US federal standard,

which is almost safe to drink.

Narrator: Anything that can't be recycled

or reused on board goes to what's known

as a waste-to-energy facility.

Now, we didn't get to
see it for ourselves,

but Royal Caribbean said

"heat or gas from the waste is collected

and converted to energy."

Chiron: It's definitely
within their best interests

to be the most environmentally friendly,

because it significantly can
reduce the waste on board,

the weight that they have
to carry, the fuel usage,

and it reduces their
operational expenses as well.

Narrator: And after one week at sea,

the recycling gets cleared out,

incoming provisions are brought on board,

and the crew prepares the ship

to start the process all over again.

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