Earth 300, a yet-to-be-built nuclear-powered vessel designed to save the planet, has partnered with DNV
Superyachts are often built for pleasure. Thought of as vessels designed for leisure and escape, they tend to evoke a world of still water, soft light, and unhurried days. Which is why it’s a little jarring, surprisingly so, to encounter one conceived as a launchpad for planetary-scale science.
The Earth 300 is still on paper, but its intent is clear: to gather some (160, to be precise) of the sharpest minds in the world—scientists, engineers, explorers, artists—on a nuclear-powered vessel. When complete, the 300m vessel is set to house 22 laboratories, operate with zero emissions, and sail with a permanent onboard community focused on the most urgent questions of our time: climate, ocean health, biodiversity, and the future of human life on a changing planet.

It is an incredibly ambitious idea—one that came to Aaron Olivera, founder of the project, during a visit to the oceanographic museum in Monaco. “Jacques Cousteau was a director (at the museum) and I thought of his vessel Calypso,” says Olivera. “If we want solve issues quickly, we need the help of the entire world, and the idea of galvanising humanity by building an iconic object that would inspire was a no brainer.”
Originally slated to start sailing in 2025, the project has been delayed by a combination of global events and the sheer complexity of what it proposes to do. The pandemic and the war in Ukraine disrupted supply chains and drove up construction costs by as much as 40 per cent, creating hesitation among traditional investors.

“The sheer scale of our vision has never been meant for a typical investor,” explains Olivera. “Over the last three years we have been busy establishing key partnerships with essential project partners, including a major agreement with a leading European government-funded advanced nuclear reactor company to develop the maritime version of the reactor.”
Adding to that, the project has just recently announced a strategic partnership with DNV, the world’s largest maritime classification society. The agreement, signed in Norway in June 2025, is focused on addressing regulatory challenges affecting maritime nuclear technology and being on top of new solutions and energy efficiency technologies relevant to advanced research vessels.
While the partnership is an undeniable win for the project, the road to completing something as large and ambitious as this is still long. That said, Earth 300 continues to offer a compelling prospect of a vessel designed for inquiry, collaboration, and planetary-scale ambition.