The Jules Verne Trophy is a prize for the fastest circumnavigation of the world by any type of yacht with no restrictions on the size of the crew provided the vessel has registered with the organization and paid an entry fee. [1] A vessel holding the Jules Verne trophy will not necessarily hold the absolute round the world record. The trophy was first awarded to the first yacht which sailed around the world in less than 80 days. The name of the award is a reference to the Jules Verne novel Around the World in Eighty Days in which Phileas Fogg traverses the planet (albeit by railroad and steamboat) in 80 days. The current holder is IDEC Sport skippered by Francis Joyon in 40 days 23 hours 30 minutes 30 seconds. [2]
The Jules Verne Trophy is awarded to the challenger who breaks the previous Jules Verne record of the round the world voyage under sail. The winner holds the trophy until such time as his/her record has been bettered. The boats must solely be propelled by natural forces of the wind and of the crew, but the trophy is open to any type of boat with no restrictions. Crew size is not restricted either. The circumnavigation must be completed non-stop and with no physical outside assistance, although on-shore weather routing is allowed. The challengers must respect certain safety rules. [3]
The original idea for this competition has been attributed to Yves Le Cornec in 1985. The rules were defined in 1990. A committee was put in place to guarantee respect of the rules and fairplay. This committee included Peter Blake, Florence Arthaud, Jean-François Coste, Yvon Fauconnier, Gabrie Guilly, Robin Knox-Johnston, Titouan Lamazou, Yves Le Cornec, Bruno Peyron, Olivier de Kersauson, and Didier Ragot.
While the current holder of the trophy, Francis Joyon, also holds the around the world sailing record, this has not always been the case. In 2004 Steve Fossett broke the world record with the catamaran Cheyenne but was not awarded the trophy. According to reports, the trophy organizers requested a higher entrance fee from Fossett than from the other competitors, the difference which he refused to pay. The winner of the trophy that year was Olivier de Kersauson on Geronimo , with a time which was five days slower than Fossett's world record. [1]
Passage | Date | Time | Skipper | Crew | Boat |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ushant-Equator | 2019 | 4 d 19 h 57 min | Yann Guichard | 14 people | Maxi Spindrift 2 |
Equator-Cape Agulhas | 2021 | 5 d 20 h 39 min | Franck Cammas | 6 people | fr:Maxi Edmond de Rothschild |
Indian Ocean WSSRC | 2016 | 5 d 21 h 09 min | Francis Joyon | 6 people | IDEC sport |
Pacific Ocean WSSRC | 2017 | 7 d 15 h 15 min | François Gabart | singlehanded | Macif |
Cape Horn-Equator | 2017 | 6 d 22 h 15 min | François Gabart | singlehanded | Macif |
Equator-Ushant | 2017 | 5 d 19 h 21 min | Francis Joyon | 6 people | IDEC sport |
The best passage times are shared between 4 boats:
Adding the record times of the various intermediate routes, gives a total record round the world in 36 days 22 hours and 36 minutes, or 4 days better than the record established in 2017 by Francis Joyon on IDEC sport .
Francis Joyon took possession of the former Groupama 3 on October 2, 2015, after three weeks of work at Multiplast, in Vannes. [4] He chose an intermediate configuration between the initial power and a reduced rigging for solo races. Closer to the lightness and ergonomics sought alone, less versatile in particular in light winds, Joyon's choices paid off during his two passages in the southern seas at the end of 2015 and again at the end of 2016, earning him numerous records. With a crew reduced to six people, IDEC Sport was ready to attempt the Jules-Verne Trophy, [5] held since 2011 by Loïck Peyron with a time of 45 days, 13 hours, 42 minutes and 53 seconds.
After an attempt in November 2016 met with unfavorable weather in the doldrums and the South Atlantic, and a shock that slightly damaged her fin, Joyon set out again on December 16, 2016 to conquer the trophy. He arrived on January 26, 2017 with a new around the world sailing record of 40 days 23 h 30 min 30 s. [6] During their 2016 attempt for the Jules-Verne Trophy, Francis Joyon and his crew [7] broke numerous intermediate records: four have been formalized and are the subject of records duly certified by the WSSRC. [8]
They made quick crossings of the southern seas starting with the Indian Ocean, [7] covering 8091,73 miles in 10 days (an average of 809 miles per day). This episode began ahead of the front of a depression which moved at a speed corresponding to the boat's potential from South America to the Pacific Ocean. During 12 days, the wind remained port tack, blowing constantly at over 30 knots, an ideal configuration for speed records. Top speeds varied between 38 and 44 knots. Due to bad seas, their speed dropped temporarily (29 knots or 700 mi (1,100 km) per day) but soon climbed back above 800 mi (1,300 km) daily.
After passing New Zealand and the Antimeridian, sailing port tack 205 degrees longitude (25 degrees West to Antimeridian) in the southern seas, the crew jibed in the transition between two depressions, and managed to catch up with the weather system in front of them over the Pacific Ocean, setting off again at more than 30 knots daily average towards Cape Horn.
Joyon rounded Cape Horn, 16 days after hitting the first left South America, after a course of nearly 12,000 mi (19,000 km) above 30 knots average (730, 16 miles per day over 16 days). He then signs a performance increase of 30 to 40% compared to Loïck Peyron's record 5 years earlier. Leaving the southern seas with a lead of 4 days 6 hours 35 min over Peyron's previous record, Joyon and his crew regained 2,800 mi (4,500 km) on the record during this stretch.
The weather conditions allowed them to optimize their course, covering 26,412 mi (42,506 km) on the ground, at an average of 26.85 knots, for a theoretical course of 22,461 mi (36,147 km). Banque Populaire V, the previous recordholder, had to cover almost 2600 more miles (29,002 miles).
While the best day of Loïck Peyron's previous record was the only day above 800 miles from his record (811 miles over 24 hours, or 33.79 knots average), Francis Joyon maintains a speed above 800 daily miles for 10 consecutive days.
It thus improves a large number of progress records by a sailboat over a given period:
Skipper | Reference | Distance (miles) | speed (knots) | speed (miles/24 h) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Joyon | best 24h | 894 | 37,3 | 894 |
best 48 h | 1 748,2 | 36,42 | 874,1 | |
best 72 h | 2 617,7 | 36,36 | 872,57 | |
best 4 days | 3 477,4 | 36,22 | 869,35 | |
Joyon | best 5 days | 4 312,57 | 35,94 | 862,51 |
best 6 days | 5 104,16 | 35,45 | 850,7 | |
best 8 days | 6 525,14 | 33,99 | 815,64 | |
best 10 days | 8 091,73 | 33,71 | 809,17 | |
best 12 days | 9 369,03 | 32,53 | 780,75 | |
Joyon | best 16 days | 11 682,62 | 30,42 | 730,16 |
Year | Skipper | Yacht | Type | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Francis Joyon | IDEC Sport | Trimaran | 40 days 23 hours 30 minutes 30 seconds [9] |
2012 | Loïck Peyron | Banque Populaire V | Trimaran | 45 days 13 hours 42 minutes 53 seconds |
2010 | Franck Cammas | Groupama 3 | Trimaran | 48 days 7 hours 44 minutes 52 seconds [10] |
2005 | Bruno Peyron | Orange II | Catamaran | 50 days 16 hours 20 minutes 4 seconds [11] |
2004 | Olivier de Kersauson | Geronimo | Trimaran | 63 days 13 hours 59 minutes 46 seconds [1] |
2002 | Bruno Peyron | Orange | Catamaran | 64 days 8 hours 37 minutes 24 seconds |
1997 | Olivier de Kersauson | Sport Elec | Trimaran | 71 days 14 hours 22 minutes 8 seconds |
1994 | Robin Knox-Johnston Peter Blake | ENZA New Zealand | Catamaran | 74 days 22 hours 17 minutes 22 seconds |
1993 | Bruno Peyron | Explorer | Catamaran | 79 days 6 hours 15 minutes 56 seconds |
During her Jules-Verne trophy record in 2011–2012, the Banque Populaire V skippered by Loïck Peyron covered 811.70 nautical miles in 24 hours on 3 December 2011 at 11:45 UT, posting 28 days over 600 miles, including 9 days over 700 miles and 1 day over 800 miles. [12]
During her Jules-Verne trophy record in 2009–2010, the trimaran Groupama 3 skippered by Franck Cammas covered 798 nautical miles in 24 hours on 13 February 2010 at 5 p.m. UT, showing 17 days over 600 miles, including 10 days over 700 miles.
During her Jules-Verne trophy record in 2016–2017, the trimaran Idec sport skippered by Francis Joyon covered 894 nautical miles in 24 hours, and 10 consecutive days at 809 miles / 24 h. Francis Joyon rounds Cape Horn, 16 days after riding off of South America, and after a course of nearly 12,000 miles above an average of 30 knots (730.16 miles / 24 h over 16 days). He then signs a performance increase of between 30 and 40% compared to the record to be broken by Loïck Peyron 5 years earlier. Leaving the southern seas with a lead of 4 j 06 h 35 min over Loïck Peyron's previous record, Francis Joyon and his crew regained the equivalent of 2,800 miles on the record during this episode.
During the aborted attempt of 2019, Yann Guichard sets a new record crossing the equator in 4 days 19 h 57 min and, thanks to favorable weather conditions, lines up 4,812.1 miles from the 11th to 16th day, or 802 miles / day for 6 consecutive days.
During his record around the world Singlehanded in 2017, 24 hour distance record for François Gabart on Macif: 850,68 miles in 24h. [13]
During his attempt for the Jules Verne Trophy on December 5, 2020, Thomas Coville on fr:Sodebo Ultim 3 covered 889.9 miles in 24 hours (37.1 knots average, top speed 48.9 knots). [14]
Skipper | Date | Equator | Good Hope | Cape Agulhas | Cape Leeuwin | Tasmania | Anti méridian | Cape Horn | Equator return | Ushant |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Franck Cammas | 2021 | 5 d 13 h 14 min | 11 d 09 h 53 min | 11 d 14 h 03 min | resign on day 13 (rudder failure) | |||||
Thomas Coville | 2020 | 5 d 09 h 50 min | 12 d 02 h 05 min | 12 d 03 h 45 min | resign on day 16 (rudder failure) | |||||
Yann Guichard | 2019 | 4 d 19 h 57 min | 12 d 13 h 02 min | 12 d 14 h 52 min | resign on day 16 (rudder failure) | |||||
Francis Joyon | 2016 | 5 d 18 h 59 min | 12 d 19 h 28 min | 12 d 21 h 22 min | 17 d 06 h 59 min | 18 d 18 h 31 min | 20 d 07 h 04 min | 26 d 15 h 45 min | 35 d 04 h 09 min | 40 d 23 h 30 min |
Loïck Peyron | 2011 | 5 d 14 h 55 min | 11 d 21 h 48 min | 11 d 23 h 49 min | 17 d 23 h 57 min | 20 d 07 h 11 min | 22 d 11 h 34 min | 30 d 22 h 19 min | 38 d 02 h 46 min | 45 d 13 h 42 min |
Yann Guichard | 2015 | 4 d 21 h 29 min | 11 d 22 h 04 min | 12 d 00 h 02 min | 18 d 11 h 25 min | 20 d 04 h 37 min | 22 d 07 h 43 min | 30 d 04 h 07 min | 39 d 13 h 31 min | 47 d 10 h 59 min |
Francis Joyon | 2015 | 5 d 05 h 01 min | 13 d 05 h 11 min | 13 d 09 h 15 min | 18 d 20 h 37 min | 20 d 08 h 18 min | 22 d 09 h 48 min | 31 d 01 h 47 min | 40 d 14 h 53 min | 47 d 14 h 47 min |
Franck Cammas | 2009 | 5 d 15 h 23 min | 14 d 13 h 31 min | 14 d 15 h 48 min | 21 d 14 h 22 min | 22 d 20 h 27 min | 25 d 07 h 36 min | 32 d 04 h 34 min | 41 d 21 h 09 min | 48 d 07 h 44 min |
Bruno Peyron | 2005 | 7 d 02 h 56 min | 14 d 05 h 21 min | 14 d 08 h 19 min | 21 d 13 h | 23 d 19 h 23 min | 25 d 21 h 33 min | 32 d 13 h 29 min | 40 d 19 h 05 min | 50 d 16 h 20 min |
O. de Kersauson | 2003 | 6 d 11 h 26 min | 16 d 14 h 35 min | 26 d 04 h 53 min | 31 d 22 h 53 min | 41 d 16 h 27 min | 53 d 09 h 37 min | 68 d 01 h 58 min [15] | ||
Bruno Peyron | 2002 | 7 d 22 h | 18 d 18 h 40 min | 29 d 07 h 22 min | 34 d 09 h 20 min | 42 d 02 h 52 min | 53 d 04 h 49 min | 64 d 08 h 37 min |
Skipper | Date | Ushant Equator | Equator Good Hope | Good Hope Cape Leeuwin | Cape Leeuwin Cape Horn | Cape Horn Equator | Equator Ushant |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Franck Cammas | 2009 | 5 d 13 h 14 min | 5 d 20 h 39 min | ||||
Thomas Coville | 2020 | 5 d 09 h 50 min | 6 d 16 h 15 min | ||||
Yann Guichard | 2019 | 4 d 19 h 57 min | 7 d 17 h 11 min | ||||
Francis Joyon | 2016 | 5 d 18 h 59 min | 7 d 00 h 29 min | 4 d 11 h 31 min | 9 d 08 h 46 min | 8 d 12 h 24 min | 5 d 19 h 21 min |
Loïck Peyron | 2011 | 5 d 14 h 55 min | 6 d 06 h 53 min | 6 d 02 h 09 min | 12 d 22 h 22 min | 7 d 04 h 27 min | 7 d 10 h 58 min |
Yann Guichard | 2015 | 4 d 21 h 29 min | 7 d 00 h 35 min | 6 d 13 h 21 min | 12 d 06 h 03 min | 9 d 09 h 24 min | 7 d 21 h 28 min |
Francis Joyon | 2015 | 5 d 05 h 01 min | 8 d 04 h 10 min | 5 d 15 h 26 min | 12 d 05 h 10 min | 9 d 13 h 06 min | 6 d 23 h 56 min |
Franck Cammas | 2009 | 5 d 15 h 23 min | 7 d 02 h 23 min | 7 d 00 h 51 min | 10 d 14 h 12 min | 9 d 16 h 35 min | 6 d 10 h 44 min |
Bruno Peyron | 2005 | 7 d 02 h 56 min | 7 d 05 h 23 min | 7 d 07 h 39 min | 12 d 00 h 29 min | 8 d 05 h 36 min | 9 d 21 h 15 min |
O. de Kersauson | 2003 | 6 d 11 h 26 min | |||||
Bruno Peyron | 2002 | 7 d 22 h 00 min | 11 d 01 h 57 min | 11 d 03 h 48 min |
Skipper | Date | Good Hope Cape Horn | Equator Equator | Equator Cape Horn | Cape Horn Ushant | Indian Ocean WSSRC | Pacific Ocean WSSRC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Francis Joyon | 2016 | 13 d 20 h 13 min | 29 d 09 h 10 min | 20 d 20 h 46 min | 14 d 07 h 45 min | 5 d 21 h 09 min | 7 d 21 h 14 min |
Loïck Peyron | 2011 | 19 d 00 h 31 min | 32 d 11 h 51 min | 25 d 07 h 23 min | 14 d 15 h 25 min | 8 d 07 h 23 min | 10 d 15 h 07 min |
Yann Guichard | 2015 | 18 d 06 h 03 min | 34 d 08 h 02 min | 25 d 06 h 38 min | 17 d 06 h 54 min | 8 d 04 h 45 | 9 d 23 h 30 min |
Francis Joyon | 2015 | 17 d 20 h 36 min | 35 d 13 h 52 min | 26 d 00 h 46 min | 16 d 13 h 02 min | 7 d 00 h 00 | 10 d 23 h 10 min |
Franck Cammas | 2009 | 17 d 15 h 03 min | 36 d 02 h 03 min | 26 d 09 h 27 min | 16 d 03 h 19 min | 8 d 17 h 39 min | 8 d 18 h 41 min |
Bruno Peyron | 2005 | 18 d 08 h 08 min | 33 d 16 h 06 min | 25 d 10 h 33 min | 18 d 02 h 39 min | 9 d 11 h 04 min | 8 d 18 h 08 min |
O. de Kersauson | 2003 | 25 d 01 h 52 min | |||||
Bruno Peyron | 2002 | 23 d 08 h 12 min | 22 d 05 h 45 min |
Year | Skipper | Yacht | Type | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | Franck Cammas | Gitana 17 | Trimaran | rudder failure, 13 days after departure, south east of Cape Agulhas. |
2020 | Thomas Coville | fr:Sodebo Ultim 3 | Trimaran | rudder failure, 16 days after departure, south east of Kerguelen islands. |
2020 | Franck Cammas | Gitana 17 | Trimaran | Broken foil, Cape Verde 3 days after departure. |
2019 | Yann Guichard | Spindrift 2 formerly Banque Populaire V | Trimaran | Rudder problem, about 50 miles West of Porto, Portugal on December 4, 2019 after 23 hours from departure. |
2016 | Francis Joyon | IDEC 3 formerly Banque Populaire VII and Groupama 3 | Trimaran | Turned around after one week due to weather window did not evolve as forecasted [16] |
2015 | Francis Joyon | IDEC 3 formerly Banque Populaire VII and Groupama 3 | Trimaran | 47 days 14 hours 47 minutes, [17] record not broken, crossed the finish line on January 8, 2016 |
2015 | Yann Guichard Dona Bertarelli | Spindrift 2 formerly Banque Populaire V | Trimaran | 47 days 10 hours 59 minutes, [18] record not broken, crossed the finish line on January 8, 2016 |
2011 | Pascal Bidégorry | Banque Populaire V | Trimaran | Damaged centerboard, west of the Cape of Good Hope [19] |
2009 | Franck Cammas | Groupama 3 | Trimaran | Broken aft beam bulkhead, South Africa [20] |
2008 | Franck Cammas | Groupama 3 | Trimaran | Loss of leeward float leading to capsize, New Zealand [21] |
2004 | Bruno Peyron | Orange II | Catamaran | Damaged starboard hull, Cap Verde islands |
2004 | Bruno Peyron | Orange II | Catamaran | Damaged starboard crashbox, Spain |
2004 | Olivier de Kersauson | Geronimo | Trimaran | Damaged gennaker, North Atlantic |
2003 | Olivier de Kersauson | Geronimo | Trimaran | Circumnavigation achieved, record not broken |
2003 | Ellen MacArthur | Kingfisher 2 (formerly Orange) | Catamaran | Broken mast, South-East Kerguelen Islands |
2002 | Olivier de Kersauson | Geronimo | Trimaran | Damaged rudder, Brasil |
2002 | Bruno Peyron | Orange (formerly Innovation Explorer ) | Catamaran | Damaged mast, Ouessant |
1998 | Tracy Edwards | Royal et SunAlliance (formerly ENZA New Zealand ) | Catamaran | Broken mast, Southern seas |
1996 | Olivier de Kersauson | Sport-Elec | Trimaran | Excessive delay |
1995 | Olivier de Kersauson | Sport-Elec (formerly Lyonnaise des Eaux) | Trimaran | Extreme weather |
1994 | Olivier de Kersauson | Lyonnaise des Eaux (formerly Charal) | Trimaran | Circumnavigation achieved, record not broken |
1993 | Peter Blake Robin Knox-Johnston | ENZA New Zealand | Catamaran | Damaged hull, Indian Ocean |
1993 | Olivier de Kersauson | Charal | Trimaran | Damaged outrigger hull, South of Cape Town |
The "Trophy Jules Verne" was the subject of a public order of the visual arts delegation with the American artist Tom Shannon and is patroned by the French Ministry of Culture. [22]
The work is a floating hull on a magnetic field, much as an anchorage for a ship. All dimensions have rigorous symbolic meaning. The midship beam of the hull corresponds to the diameter of the Earth, the ray of each end is proportional to that of the moon and the radius of the curvature of the frames is that of the sun. The competitors of the Trophy Jules Verne race around the Earth against time, with only the sun and the moon as companions and time keepers.
The sculpture is placed on a cast aluminium base, on which the names of the sailors having won the Trophy are engraved. The Musée national de la Marine in Paris hosts and maintains the Trophy. Each winner receives a miniature of the Trophy, magnetized like the original one.
When a record is broken, an official ceremony is held for the previous record holders to hand over the trophy to the new record holders, who are given the hull and must place it in its magnetic field mooring.
A trimaran is a multihull boat that comprises a main hull and two smaller outrigger hulls which are attached to the main hull with lateral beams. Most modern trimarans are sailing yachts designed for recreation or racing; others are ferries or warships. They originated from the traditional double-outrigger hulls of the Austronesian cultures of Maritime Southeast Asia; particularly in the Philippines and Eastern Indonesia, where it remains the dominant hull design of traditional fishing boats. Double-outriggers are derived from the older catamaran and single-outrigger boat designs.
Dame Ellen Patricia MacArthur is a retired English sailor, from Whatstandwell near Matlock in Derbyshire, now based in Cowes, Isle of Wight.
Francis Joyon is a French professional sailboat racer and yachtsman. Joyon and his crew currently hold the Jules Verne Trophy for circumnavigation, on IDEC SPORT, nearly five days less than the previous reference time. He held the record for the fastest single-handed sailing circumnavigation from 2008 to 2016.
Franck Cammas is a French yachtsman. He has lived in Brittany since his victory in the Challenge Espoir Crédit Agricole in 1994. After completing a two-year maths course for the ‘Grandes écoles’, as well as a piano academy, Franck Cammas finally opted for a career in sailing. In 1997, at the age of 24, he won the Solitaire du Figaro and a year later helmed his first trimaran christened Groupama. Despite his late entry into competition, he is one of the most talented and respected sailors in the Ocean Racing Multihull Association world.
ORMA 60 is a class of sailing trimarans administered by the Ocean Racing Multihull Association (ORMA) that created in 1996 by the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) within the sport of sailing. The boats were built to a box rule that permitted 60 feet length and beam and a 100-foot mast.
Boris Herrmann is a German yachtsman and author competing mostly in offshore races in the IMOCA 60 class.
Speed sailing records are sanctioned, since 1972, by the World Sailing Speed Record Council (WSSRC). Records are measured either by average speed over a specified distance or by total distance traveled during a specified time interval. The three most sought after records are the:
IDEC SPORT is a racing sailing trimaran designed for transoceanic record-setting. She is one of the world's fastest ocean-going sailing vessels and the current holder of the Jules Verne Trophy for circumnavigation of the world. She was originally skippered by French yachtsman Franck Cammas, with a crew of ten and sponsored by the French insurance company Groupama. She is currently skippered by Françis Joyon.
Banque Populaire V, is an offshore-racing trimaran which was originally run by Team Banque Populaire. It was Team Banque Populaire's fifth boat designed to set oceanic records. She was launched on 4 October 2008 in Nantes, France. She holds multiple records for sailing over set courses, as well as the record for distance sailed in 24 hours by any class of sailing boat, 908.2 nm.
Geronimo is a French trimaran designed to break great offshore records. It was skippered by the French yachtsman Olivier de Kersauson. It was launched on Saturday 29 September 2001 in Brest, France by Marie Tabarly. In January 2003, skipper Kersauson said that the Geronimo was attacked by a giant squid during an attempt to win the Jules Verne Trophy.
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The boat was initially launched "Code Zero" as its owners searched for sponsorship. It was soon renamed Innovation Explorer and is an ocean-racing catamaran. It was built for The Race, a no-limits non-stop crewed circumnavigation in which she took second place.
The first around the world sailing record for circumnavigation of the world can be attributed to the surviving crew of Ferdinand Magellan's expedition, including the last captain Juan Sebastián Elcano who completed their journey in 1522.
IDEC 2 is an ocean racing trimaran skippered by Francis Joyon and sponsored by groupe IDEC. She is currently named Qingdao China.
Loïck Peyron is a French yachtsman, younger brother of the yachtsman Bruno Peyron.
VPLP design is a French-based naval architectural firm founded by Marc Van Peteghem and Vincent Lauriot-Prévost, responsible for designing some of the world's most innovative racing boats. Their designs presently hold many of the World Speed Sailing records.
Thomas Coville is a French yacht racer.
Alex Pella is a Spanish yachtsman. In 2014 he became the first Spaniard to win a transoceanic single-handed race, the Route du Rhum. Alex Pella made history once again, on 26 January 2017, when he broke, with the rest of the team, the absolute round-the-world speed sailing record, known as the Jules Verne Trophy, aboard the sophisticated maxi-multihull IDEC 3. They circumnavigated the planet in 40 days, 23 hours, 30 minutes and 30 seconds.
The Ultim class is class of offshore trimaran sailboats.
Arkéa Ultim Challenge-Brest is a solo race around the world for giant Ultim class trimarans organised by the Société OC Sport Pen Duick, a subsidiary of the French group Télégramme. The course is identical to that of the Vendée Globe, with the difference that the start is given in Brest. The first edition of the race was held in 2024.