Moby Lines Explained

Moby S.p.A.
Foundation:1959
Location:Milan, Italy
Area Served:Italy, France, Corsica, Sardinia
Key People:Vincenzo Onorato, Chairman
Industry:Passenger transportation, Freight transportation
Subsid:St. Peter Line
Tirrenia
Toremar
Homepage:www.moby.it

Moby Lines (Moby Lines S.p.A.) is an Italian shipping company that operates ferries and cruiseferries between the Italian or French mainland and the islands of Elba, Sardinia and Corsica. The company was founded in 1959 under the name Navigazione Arcipelago Maddalenino (NAVARMA for short).

In 2006 Moby Lines purchased Lloyd Sardegna. The company is known for using Warner Bros. Looney Tunes characters as the external livery of its ships. Notable events include the Moby Prince disaster in 1991, which resulted in the deaths of 140 people.

History

NAVARMA was founded in 1959 by Achille Onorato, and started traffic from Sardinia to the islands on coast of Sardinia with the small ferry M/S Maria Maddalena purchased from Denmark. In February 1966 NAVARMA purchased a second ferry, M/S Bonifacioo, and started service between Sardinia and Corsica. The company slowly expanded, purchasing another ferry in 1967 and taking delivery of two newbuilds in 1974 and 1981. With the larger fleet, new routes to the Italian mainland were also introduced.

In 1982 the company acquired M/S Free Enterprise II from Townsend Thoresen, renamed her M/S Moby Blu and painted her in the "blue whale" livery that later came to characterise Moby Lines (the company name still remained NAVARMA at this point). The Moby Blu was over twice the size of NAVARMA's previously largest ship. By 1988 four additional larger ferries (all with Moby-prefixed names) had joined by NAVARMA fleet and additional routes to the Italian mainland were opened.

In 1991 one of the ferries of the fleet, the Moby Prince, was involved in the worst disaster in the Italian merchant navy since World War II. This resulted in 140 deaths.

During the early 1990s NAVARMA acquired further used ferries, which replaced the Moby ferries acquired in the 1980s. During the same time "Moby Lines" was adopted as the official company name. From 1996 onwards the company fleet has grown radically with addition of new, larger and faster tonnage, including the newbuilt fast cruiseferries Moby Wonder, Moby Freedom and Moby Aki. Around 2003 Moby Lines entered an agreement with Warner Bros. to paint their vessels in liveries featuring Looney Tunes characters. However, only the larger ships have such liveries, the company's smaller ships either have similar graphics not featuring the Looney Tunes characters, or simply the Moby Lines' whale logo.

In 2020, in a departure away from Moby Lines' signature business model of acquiring vintage tonnage for its routes, it was announced that steel cutting has started for Moby Lines' two newbuild vessels on order from the Guangzhou Shipyard. These newbuilds will be 238 metres (784 feet) long and roughly 69,500 GT, and specifically designed for the 7-9 hour Livorno-Olbia ferry crossing. These newbuild twins are earmarked to replace the Moby Aki and Moby Wonder between 2022 and 2023.[1] [2]

Fleet

Current Ships

Ship Flag Built Entered service Route Length Width Passengers Vehicles Knots Image
MS Giraglia 1981 1981 75 m 13 m 400 100 18
1974 2016 118,7 m 18,5 m 1,440 373 18
MS Moby Kiss MS Moby Kiss 1975 2016 115.35 m 20.6 m 1,600 420 18
1975 2003 185 m 27 m 1,900 500 27
1982 2015 153 m 24.2 m 2,048530 20
MS Vincenzo Florio 1999 2024 180.3 m 26.8 m 1.471 630 23
MS Raffaele Rubattino 2000 2024 180.3 m 26.8 m 1.471 630 23
MS Moby Ale Due 2001 2024 214 m 26.4 m 2,700 900 29.5
MS Moby Wonder 2001 2024 175 m 27 m 2,200 750 29
2002 2007 212 m 25 m 2,200 580 30
MS Moby Fantasy 2021 2023 237 m 32 m 3,000 1,300 23.5
MS Moby Legacy 2023 2024 237 m 32 m 3,000 1,300 23.5

Out of Service

Ship Flag Built Entered service Route Length Width Passengers Vehicles Knots Image
1976 2006 185 m 27 m 1,900 500 27
1981 2016 Laid up in Livorno169.1 m 28.5 m 1,538 500 22
MS Moby Orli MS Moby Orli 1986 2017 176.8 m 32.9 m 2,500 580 22
MS Moby Aki 2005 2005 175 m 27 m 2,200 750 29

Former fleet

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Steel cutting starts on the first of Moby's next-generation ferries. 3 June 2020.
  2. Web site: June (And early July) 2019 news roundup. 18 July 2019.