Archive for the ‘P&O’ Category

New and Imaginative Itineraries

Azamara Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cunard Line, MSC, Mediterranean, News, Northern Europe, P&O, Seabourn Cruises, World | Posted by cruisepeople
Aug 30 2010

By Mark Tre

With Seabourn now about half-way through its acceptance of its new 450-passenger Seabourn Odyssey, Seabourn Sojourn and Seabourn Quest, we are going to see more change in this sector. With three ships of this size, Seabourn is beginning to resemble the original Royal Viking Line, which in 1972 introduced three ultra-luxury 550-berth cruise ships that ranged the world and hardly ever repeated an itinerary.

The main difference is that Royal Viking’s ships were only 21,000 tons each (38 tons per passenger) when new, whereas Seabourn’s newbuildings measure 32,346 tons each (72 tons per passenger). That is almost 90% more space per guest. The other is that while each Royal Viking ship was owned by an individual owner, Seabourn has behind it the might of the biggest cruise grouping in the world.

Seabourn began developing new itineraries when it decided to send its generation one Seabourn Pride to the Far East as a pathfinder to develop new and fascinating destinations for the old crowd. But rather than list a whole series of new ports, which can get awfully boring, we are going to pick just one new itinerary that marks a big change for Seabourn.
New in 2011 will be an 18-night ex-UK cruise that leaves Southampton on April 27th and calls at Gibraltar (a popular port for Brits but one that does not get as many calls as one might think), Palma de Mallorca, Valencia, Civitavecchia (for Rome), Livorno (for Florence). Alicante, Lisbon and Leixoes before returning to Southampton on May 15. Now there are several things going in favour of such an itinerary. Number one, Seabourn has a large following in the UK who will welcome the opportunity of being able to cruise from the UK without having to fly.

Number two, through parent company Carnival UK it has a multi-year contract with the owners of the Port of Southampton. And number three, Seabourn president and ceo Pam Conover, and equally three of the new ships’ captains (including Capt Ian McNaught from QE2) are British. This is not to say that Seabourn is a British company, but it is certainly beginning to exploit its British connections.

The first of these new ex-UK itineraries actually took place two months ago, when the Seabourn Sojourn‘s maiden voyage, a 14-night British Isles and Iceland itinerary from Greenwich to Dover was followed by a 14-night Baltic cruise from Dover to Dover. Previously, although Seabourn ships were fairly frequent visitors to London, their itineraries were usually one-way cruises that involved sailing out and flying back or vice versa.

Seabourn Sojourn will of course also be doing her first World Cruise in 2011, when she sets out from Los Angeles to Southampton on January 5. Look for more new itineraries at www.seabourn.com

Still within the Carnival Group, Costa has pulled a rabbit out of a hat – two rabbits in fact – with its new 10-night "European Capitals" itinerary for the 2,700-berth Costa Magica, completed in Italy in 2004. These new departures will leave mainly from Dover (with three from Harwich) and not from Southampton, chiefly because of steaming distances to and from these European capitals.

The first rabbit is a totally new itinerary that manages to do the North Sea without falling back on the tried and tested (but almost boring for their repetition) Norwegian Fjords or Baltic and St Petersburg itinerary. The new cruises will start in Amsterdam and take in Hamburg (158 miles from Berlin, but a destination in its own right), Copenhagen, Oslo and Edinburgh (all three capital cities), Le Havre (127 miles from Paris) and Dover (80 miles from London).

The second rabbit is that after years of saying that Costa would not base a ship in the UK because the group was already represented there by Cunard, P&O and Princess, it will now be selling cruises on the Costa Magica from Dover, and this only three months after closing its own London office. Marco Rosa, former UK managing director, is now area director based in Genoa in charge of the UK, Scandinavia and South Africa while Costa’s UK sales representatives report to Genoa.

Dover departures for the Costa Magica‘s "European Capitals" cruises are scheduled for June 8, 18 and 28; July 8, 18 and 28, and August 7 and 17. There will also be three departures from Harwich on May 29 and again on August 27 and September 6, which will call at Invergordon (175 miles from Edinburgh).

Dover stands to gain then from eight new Costa departures in 2011, which will be a relief for them after losing NCL to Copenhagen in 2010 and MSC to Southampton in 2011. Costa has not had a UK-based ship since the Enrico Costa operated from Southampton in the early 1990s.

It had been rumoured earlier that Pullmantur Cruises might be doing something similar with the ports of Amsterdam, Dover, Le Havre and Bilbao on a 7-night round voyage, with  Atlantic Star, but at the moment that ship is replacing Pacific Dream on her Lisbon and Malaga departures. The idea of this more Iberian itinerary was that passengers would be able to board at any port, and of course such an itinerary would also include Spain. Nothing further has been heard of this idea.

Meanwhile, in the market between Costa and Seabourn, Azamara Club Cruises last week announced that the 694-berth Azamara Journey will introduce two new itineraries that will include Dublin as a terminal port in 2011. The first will be a 12-night Iceland and Norwegian Fjords cruise leaving Copenhagen on August 17 and finishing in Dublin on August 29, while the second will be an August 29 departure that will also call at Cork on the way south to Lisbon, where she will arrive on September 8. While there will be no Dublin-Dublin cruises the port does gain an important cruise ship turn around.


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118 New Ships Since 2000 – Ship Sizes – The New Panama Canal

Atlantic Crossing, Caribbean, Carnival Cruise Lines, Celebrity Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cruise West, Crystal Cruises, Cunard Line, Disney Cruise Lines, Fred Olsen, Hapag LLoyd, Holland America Line, MSC, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, P&O, Panama Canal, Royal Caribbean, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
Jun 18 2010

by Mark Tre’

The recent announcement by CLIA that 118 new cruise ships had been delivered since 2000 has led us to have a look at how the world cruise fleet is now made up and how it has changed in the last decade. The findings, along with progress now being made on a new Panama Canal, are rather interesting. Large ships, nay huge ships, have now become the norm. And like the trade of the world, the type of passenger attracted to each size of ship is surely quite different.


118 New Cruise Ships Since 2000
In January, Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA) published an interesting statistic. It said that 118 new cruise ships had been introduced to the world fleet since 2000. That is very close to one ship a month, every month, year round for a decade. While there has been a slowdown during the recession, orders are starting again and it is worthwhile to have a look at how this massive new fleet is composed. To do this, in order to give the fleet a different perspective, we are going to look at how the fleet is divided in the same terms used for cargo ships, working from the largest down.

The Capesize Ships
In cargo ship terms, Capesize ships are the next size up from Suezmax, the latter being ships that are too wide or deep for the Panama Canal but can still use the Suez. Capesize ships, however, always have to navigate via the Cape of Good Hope or Cape Horn. Length and beam are not a problem in the Suez Canal, but draught is limited to 62 feet.

As cruise ships carry passengers and not heavy cargoes, this is not a problem for them, as even RMS Queen Mary 2 has only a draught of 32 feet 10 inches, which means that there is really no such thing as a "Suezmax" cruise ship. In the container trades these ships tend to be known as "post-Panamax" (a Panamax ship can carry up to 5,000 twenty-foot equivalent containers while a post-Panamax can carry up to 12,000 (although there is also now a design for a 20,000-unit vessel).

Capesize cargo ships ten to carry large cargoes of low-value goods such as coal and iron ore, of ports they can serve is severely restricted by their size. The same is of course true of Capesize cruise ships that cannot enter many cruise ports because of their own size, but the huge advantage they offer is that they can bring down rates because of economies of scale. Indeed, the same applies to Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas, which carry 6,000 passengers each but limit themselves to the same more on board activities such as ziplines and high diving and their ports, which they visit on a repetitive basis all the year round, feature things such as roller coaster rides and chair lifts. Despite the fact that they offer huge loft suites, these ships must cater to the mass market with their low unit costs in order to stay full.

Where Capesize cargo ships are typically above 150,000 tons deadweight, or about 100,000 gross tons measurement, Capesize cruise ships are of basically the same size, The first Capesize cruise ships were actually built in the 1930s, with the delivery of  Normandie for the French Lines and Cunard Line’s Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth. These three North Atlantic express passenger ships were all too long and to wide to be able to use the Panama Canal, and were the largest ships to have been built to that time.

To-day’s Capesize cruise fleet thus numbers forty-seven ships either in service or on order. Starting with the 5,400 lower berth Oasis and Allure of the Seas, they work down through a quintet (the largest cruise ship order ever placed) of the 2,850-berth Celebrity Solstice class, a quartet of 3,100-passenger ships consisting of the Voyager of the Seas class, and three trios, the 3,600-passenger Freedom of the Seas class, 3,500-guest MSC Fantasia class and the 3,100-berth Carnival Dream class.

Then follow another pair, Disney Dream and sister, and the one-off 4,200-berth Norwegian Epic (which was to have been part of a pair until her sister ship was cancelled), to be introduced next week, and Queen Mary 2, another one-off, and one with a lot more space with only 2,620 lower berths. These ships are all above 1,000 feet in overall length and only one, Voyager of the Seas of 1999, was delivered before the year 2000.

To be added to these are twenty-two more. The eleven ships of the Carnival Conquest (six) and Costa Concordia (five) classes, all 952 by 116 feet in overall dimensions, are ten feet too wide for the present Panama Canal. Eleven more ships, of the Grand Princess class, including P&O’s Azura and Ventura, all 951 x 118 feet, also fall into this category. These twenty-two Carnival Corp & PLC ships were built to a short and stout design that precludes them from passing through the present Panama Canal, and they are all products of the Fincantieri shipyards in Italy. Only one of this lot, Grand Princess of 1998, was delivered before the year 2000.

So of the 118 cruise ships delivered since 2000 sixty-seven, or more than half, are too big to transit the Panama Canal.

The Panamax Ships
The next category down is Panamax, which is the maximum size ship that can use the Panama Canal (although new locks are due to open in 2015). Cargoes carried by Panamax ships are generally a little higher value and include grain, steel and minerals as well as thermal coal and iron ore. And Panamax cruise ships are more likely to feature alternative restaurants and big shows than ziplines and roller coasters. In fact, many offer more than just a repetitive 7-day itinerary and are more likely to be found on alternating 10-day circuits in the Mediterranean as just one example.
These ships have a maximum length overall of 965 feet and a beam of 106 feet and are able to squeeze through the present locks. This size is ideal for World Cruises as well, and can reposition easily between Alaska and the Caribbean. For example, where Queen Victoria and the new Queen Elizabeth can offer world cruises that transit both Panama and Suez, Queen Mary 2 is forced to sail all the way around the tip of South America to get from the Atlantic to the Pacific as she is too big for the Panama Canal.

The Panamax cruise fleet numbers eighty ships. Owners such as Norwegian Cruise Line (and its once-parent Star Cruises) made sure they did not build wider than Panamax and so this fleet includes half a dozen Meyer-built vessels of dimensions of 965 by 106 feet, while Celebrity Cruises has four St Nazaire-built ships of the same dimensions in the Celebrity Constellation class and Princess Cruises two St Nazaire-built ships of the Coral Princess class. To these can be added Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria, all of maximum Panamax dimensions.

Following closely behind are the four ships of the MSC Musica class, all just a foot shorter than Panamax, and the four Royal Caribbean ships of the Radiance of the Seas class, three feet shorter. Following at 960 feet are the four Carnival Spirit class and two ships each of the Costa Atlantica and Costa Luminosa classes. At 936 feet, or 29 feet short of Panamax are half a dozen Holland America ships, from the 2002-built Zuiderdam to this year’s Nieuw Amsterdam. Royal Caribbean’s five 915-foot "Vision" class ships (not including the now-lengthened Enchantment of the Seas) and the 921-foot Pride of America, complete the Panamax class above 900 feet.
Fully another forty ships follow at between 800 and 900 feet and Panamax beam, representing Carnival, Celebrity, Costa, NCL, P&O, TUI Cruises and at the lower end in terms of length, the ships of Aida Cruises (half a dozen at 817 feet), P&O Australia (three at 805-810 feet) and the Crystal Serenity at 820 feet.
There have been one or two exceptions to the maximum Panamax length of 965 feet. The laid-up s.s. United States, for example, was constructed in 1952 to be able to transit the Panama in an emergency, but her overall length is 990 feet. A couple of other ships to-day, the 990-foot Enchantment of the Seas, which was lengthened in 2005, gets around this as her bow was redesigned when she was lengthened to that it can be hinged up to bring her overall length down to 965 feet. The 970-foot Utopia, to be delivered in 2013, is the other.

The New Panama Canal
However ships may be classified today, the present Panamax definition will become redundant in five years when a third lane of locks is opened on the Panama. These new locks will allow ships of up to 1200 feet length overall by 167 feet in beam and up to 49.9 feet in draft to transit the canal. Essentially, this will allow most of the world cruise ship fleet to transit Panama.

There are sure to be some exceptions, however, as with the five largest units of the Royal Caribbean fleet their maximum width at the level of the bridge wings is 226 feet for the Oasis and Allure of the Seas and 184 feet for the Freedom class ships. This could leave the five Royal Caribbean ships as the last of the Capesize cruise ships, unable to use the new locks. How many other cruise ships might be affected is not yet clear.

 
Meanwhile, Cunard’s Queen Mary 2 may be able to conduct her world cruises using the Panama Canal after 2015, although that is not yet clear. One factor, that might also affect other cruise ships, is the height of the Bridge of the Americas at the Pacific end of the canal, which has a clearance under the main span of 201 feet at high tide. By comparison, the clearance under the Verrazano Narrows Bridge at the approach to New York is 228 feet, and Queen Mary 2 clears this bridge by only 13 feet.
This means she could be about fourteen feet too tall for the Panama Canal unless some height can be obtained from masts or her funnel, which was specifically designed to the maximum height to pass under the Verrazano Narrows Bridge. By comparison the maximum height of the Queen Victoria is 179 feet from keel to top of the highest mast.

Handysize Ships
The next designation of cargo ships, called Handysize, carries all sorts of cargoes to and from ports all over the world, and again usually cargoes with higher values than either the Capesize or Panamax ships, including the likes of steel, project cargoes, copper, zinc and other valuable metals. Such ships are designed to maximum dimensions and maximum capacity to allow them to serve the vast majority of the world’s ports.

Within this grouping will be found all the traditional style cruise ships that we were used to until just a decade ago plus some new ships. Some examples of ships in this category, mostly ranging in the 600 and 700-foot overall length brackets, include the fleets of Azamara Cruises, Fred Olsen Cruises, Oceania Cruises, Phoenix Reisen, Regent Seven Seas Cruises, plus the most recent newbuildings of Seabourn and Silversea.

One point about all these fleets is that none of them do repetitive 7-day itineraries, which is the wont of the larger ships, and they offer itineraries worldwide that change according to the season, many of them never repeating an itinerary in a year.
A mixture of traditional and upmarket ships, the more traditional ones do not include many balconies but the newer middle-range ships such as the eight former Renaissance ships (now with Azamara, Oceania and Princess, with one to go to P&O soon as Adonia) offer a more discerning product. The new ships of Seabourn and Silversea, however, together with Hapag-Lloyd Cruises’ Europa, serve the most discerning market of all with not only balconies but the best of on-board facilities.

These are indeed the finest cruise ships in the world, paying attention to every detail of service. They also cost more and attract a different clientele.

Small Ships
As well as the larger ships, there is a wide variety of small ships, ranging from the myriad of new river ships to the daily mail boat from Bergen to the North Cape to ships such as Cruise West’s Spirit of Oceanus, which now completes a globe-spanning world cruise of 335 days every year and a large fleet of expedition ships sailing to the Antarctic, the Amazon to Peru and the Northwest Passage, not to mention Alaska, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands.
But that, as they say, is another story for another day.

A Message from Cunard Line re Fuel Surcharge

Cunard Line, News, P&O, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
May 04 2010

Cunard Line

May 4, 2010

Dear Travel Partner:

Because of the continued rapid escalation of fuel prices, Cunard Line and P&O (UK) will introduce a fuel supplement of $3.85 (USD) per person per day. These brands will also implement this fuel supplement on third and fourth passengers.

The new fuel supplements will apply to all new bookings effective May 10, 2010 and will apply to all departures from November 1, 2010. The fuel supplements will not exceed $154.00 per person per voyage.

For bookings made prior to May 10, 2010, no fuel supplement will apply.

We regret having to take this action, but fuel price increases have continued, and we now find it necessary to implement a modest supplement.

Please remember that all of your bookings made on or before May 9, 2010 will not be subject to the new fuel supplement. Most importantly, we want to thank you for your business and continuing support.

Sincerely,

Peter Shanks
President and Managing Director

A Move Back to Single Cabins

Cunard Line, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, P&O, Uncategorized | Posted by cruisepeople
Apr 20 2010

While Fred Olsen Cruise Lines has included a number of single cabins in all of its ships for some time, P&O and NCL are now joining them with the new Azura and Norwegian Epic, and others such as Voyages to Antiquity are joining as well, while several lines continue to offer no single supplements on certain departures.

P&O’s Azura entered service recently with 18 single cabins, 6 inside and 12 outside, These singles are so popular that they are sold out for all of 2010. But Norwegian Epic will far outstrip this, with 128 single cabins out of a total of 2,100. These so-called "studio" cabins are all inside and measure about 100 square feet each, smaller than the 120 square feet of first generation cruise ships but big enough for one person, and certainly a good way of using less desirable inside space to generate additional revenue from a singles market that has been clamouring for such accommodation for decades. The cost of a single cabin is usually more than the per person charge in a double, although on Norwegian Epic there will be no surcharge and studio customers will also get their own exclusive singles lounge.

Until Norwegian Epic, Saga Ruby claimed the largest number of single cabins, with 70 (Saga Rose, now retired, had 60). Fred Olsen’s Balmoral was next with 63, while Black Watch and Boudicca have 42 each and Braemar 27, for 174 single cabins in a single fleet. In 2009, Fred Olsen booked 7,700 single passengers, almost two-thirds of which were female, and they accounted for 8% of their passenger carryings. This compares to about 3.5% for P&O.

Voyages to Antiquity has also joined the movement with 16 cabins on board its new Aegean Odyssey out of a total of 198. The little Hebridean Spirit, however, has the highest ratio of all, with 11 single cabins out of 30, or more than a third.
Until now, many lines have been charging single supplements of 75% or even 100%, which has just pushed away the business in favour of couples. The feeling that a single might spend only half as much as two in a cabin now seems to be giving way slowly to an attitude that catering to the singles market might indeed bring them some revenue that they did not have before. After all, although each cabin must be serviced, a studio cabin occupies only about 55% of the space of a more standard 180-square foot cabin, which has been the norm on some lines for many years now.

This is far different from the attitude that prevailed ten years ago, when RMS Queen Mary 2 was designed with nothing but double cabins despite the fact that her predecessor RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 had offered 125 single cabins. The reason given at the time was shipbuilding methods and prefabricated cabins but singles now seem to be gaining some favour again in the cruise market.

Courtesy of Mark Tre

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Are The Americans Taking Control of World Cruising? – The Cruise Market in Brazil – Croisières de France

Carnival Cruise Lines, Costa Cruises, Cunard Line, Holland America Line, Louis, MSC, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Oceania Cruises, P&O, Princess Cruises, Royal Caribbean, South America | Posted by cruisepeople
Mar 15 2010

by Mark Tre’ – "The Cruise Examiner"
The recent news that the Carlyle Group of Washington has taken a controlling interest in Brazil’s CVC Cruises follows major incursions into the UK, Italian, Spanish and French markets in the last decade.

The result is that Americans will soon control all the world’s significant cruise fleets other than Swiss/Italian-based MSC Cruises, Malaysian-based Star Cruises and Cypriot-based Louis Cruises. We also look at recent events in the rapidly expanding Brazilian cruise market and what’s happening with  Bleu de France in France.

THIS WEEK’s STORY

Are The Americans Taking Control of World Cruising?
The news that the Carlyle Group of Washington has taken control of Brazil’s CVC Cruises leads one to sit back and wonder what is happening to the control of the cruise market.
At one time, Europeans effectively controlled the cruise industry in North America, with British, Dutch, Norwegian, Greek, Italian and Swedish shipowners all running cruise businesses from local offices in New York or Miami with a titular US president.
The first move away from this was the formation of Carnival Cruise Lines in 1972, after the Arisons and Klosters parted ways, with Kloster having owned the ships and Arison having run them. Set up as an independent, Carnival has come a long way from a one-ship operation to to-day, where it owns 95.
According to Ryan Wahlstrom’s Cruise Market Watch web site, Carnival now controls 55% of the North American market and 52% of the rest of the world, with Royal Caribbean having 27% and 22% respectively. If we ignore for the moment Apollo Corporation and its interests in NCL, Oceania and Regent, these figures for just the top two come to 82% and 74%. And adding NCL’s 10% North American share brings that figure to 92%.
This leaves MSC with 2% of the North American market and 10% of the rest of the world and Star Cruises with 5% and Louis with 4% of the rest of the world. Beyond that is getting into niche and one or two-ship brands.
As the world market has grown outside North America, there have been many incursions by the American "big two." The following timeline summarises the most important of these in the past dozen years or so:
1997 Royal Caribbean Cruises acquires Celebrity Cruises (UK/Greece)
1997 Carnival Corporation and Airtours (UK) jointly acquire Costa Cruses (Italy)
1998 Carnival Corporation acquires Cunard Line (UK)
2000 Carnival Corporation acquires the remaining 50% of Costa Cruises (Italy)
2000 P&O Princess Cruises PLC acquires Aida Cruises (Germany)
2003 Carnival Corporation merges with P&O Princess Cruises PLC (UK)
2003 P&O Princess Cruises PLC becomes Carnival PLC (Carnival UK)
2006 Royal Caribbean acquires Pullmantur Cruises (Spain)
2007 Carnival Corp & PLC acquires 75% of Iberocruceros (Spain)
2008 Pullmantur Cruises forms Croisières de France (France)
2009 Carnival Corp & PLC acquires the remaining 25% of Iberocruceros (Spain)
2010 Carlyle Group acquires 63.6% of CVC Cruises in Brazil (Brazil)
With Carnival and Royal Caribbean having taken control of most of the market in the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain and now Brazil the trend is obvious.
Mitigating this of course is the fact that both Carnival and Royal Caribbean do have European shareholders as well as American. Carnival PLC is listed in London and Royal Caribbean have European shareholders in Anders Wilhelmsen, one of the original Norwegian founders of the line, and Sammy Ofer, based in London. But Carnival management is clearly in American hands, with deputies in the UK and in Italy, while in the case of Royal Caribbean the decisions are made in Miami.

THIS WEEK IN CRUISING
The Cruise Market in Brazil
Many years ago, in the 1960s, Brazil had four very handsome cruise ships built in what was then Yugoslavia and in Spain. Anna Nery and Rosa de Fonseca were built in Yugoslavia while Princesa Isabel and Princesa Leopoldina came from Spain. Members of this class were used in coastal passenger service in Brazil and also for cruising, but they all later cruised elsewhere, not only from Miami and Piraeus, but also in the South Pacific and from Japan.
For many years previous to this, Brazil had been on the routes of major liner services from the United States, Moore-McCormack Lines being one of the big players, with its luxurious Argentina and Brasil, and from Europe, with operators such as Costa Line, Hamburg-Sud, Italian Line and Royal Mail Lines building ships for the South American market, regarded as second only in importance to the New York. All this activity to a keen interest in Brazil in things maritime, one that continues to this day.
The Brazilian cruise market in 2008-09 numbered 502,000 and this winter eighteen ships are offering berth capacity in excess of 900,000 with 405 cruises from Brazil. Cruise growth has averaged 33% annually over the past eight years and estimates are that the overall market could grow to 1.5 million, the size of the UK market to-day.
With the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics both scheduled for Brazil, the government is also looking at building new cruise terminals in its most important ports. Besides CVC, and the usual lines running into the Amazon, other important cruise operators in Brazil include Costa, MSC, Pullmantur and Louis.
In this context, Royal Caribbean opened an office in Sao Paulo in August 2009 and to-day has the 1,800-berth Splendour of the Seas and the 2,000-berth Vision of the Seas based there, offering 3-,4-, 5-, 7- and 8-night cruises from Santos. Ricardo Amaral, managing director of Royal Caribbean Cruizeros Brazil, is also president of ABREMAR, the Brazilian association of cruise lines.
It is also in this context that Carlyle made its latest move into the Brazilian market by taking control of CVC Cruises. Carlyle is not new to cruising, however, having taken a part interest in Iberocruceros before selling it to Carnival Corporation & PLC in 2009.

Croisières de France
Last week, Croisières de France announced that Bleu de France had been chartered as of October 24, 2010, and that her Eastern Mediterranean cruises beyond that date through to her Christmas cruise were being cancelled. This is the second time in just a few months that Bleu de France cruises have been cancelled, the last event being the cancellation of her 2009-10 Red Sea programme.
Nine cruises have been cancelled and passengers now booked are being offered substitute cruises on Pullmantur’s Zenith, which is not a French-speaking ship, in October or November, or a full refund.
In fact,  Bleu de France will be going on charter to CVC Cruises to run cruises to Fernando de Norhona, an archipelago of twenty-one islands situated some two hundred miles off the Brazilian coast that enjoys wonderful beaches and dolphin sanctuaries and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage site. This unknown destination has been listed number four in the world’s best destinations by jetsetter.com.
It seems that Bleu de France will replace  Orient Queen, which has been operating 4- to 7-night cruises from Recife and Fortaleza to Natal and Fernando de Norhona, where she stays for a full day and a half. Bleu de France will also cruise from other Brazilian ports and the CVC web site now shows her season running from November 3, 2010, to May 22, 2011.
Meanwhile, what will be the future of Croisières de France now that French passengers are being booked on to Pullmantur ships, with Pacific Dream substituting for  Bleu de France in the Caribbean and Zenith substituting for her in the Eastern Mediterranean?
Have Croisières de France’s bookings been successful enough that a larger ship can be sent to be based in Marseilles next summer? For now, at least as far as ships go, Croisières de France seems to have been reduced to a seasonal operation.

The New Crop of Ships – New Ship Orders – Updates on Last Week’s Column

Carnival Cruise Lines, Celebrity Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cunard Line, Holland America Line, MSC, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Oceania Cruises, P&O, Pearl Seas Cruises, Princess Cruises, Silversea | Posted by cruisepeople
Mar 03 2010

by Mark Tre’ – "The Cruise Examiner"
This year sees the delivery of several interesting new ships, a new Queen Elizabeth and Nieuw Amsterdam, for one thing, both named for famous Transatlantic liners, and two brand new designs, Marina from Oceania and Le Boreal from Compagnie du Ponant, each the first of a pair.
Plus new deliveries for Costa and P&O. And all from Fincantieri. We also look at the start of cruise lines placing new orders again, with one order from Carnival, two from Princess, all three from Fincantieri, and one, maybe two, from MSC with STX France, as of last week.

STORY OF THE WEEK

The New Crop of Ships
Three new orders at Fincantieri, one for Carnival and two for Princess, a new order at STX France from MSC, the recent floating out of Ponant’s Le Boreal, Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth and Oceania’s Marina (and the revelation that her sister ship will be named Riviera), and Norwegian Epic‘s sea trials, together with the christening last week in Dubai of Costa Deliziosa and in Dover of MSC Magnifica, along with the delivery next month of Celebrity Eclipse, all come together to introduce a new crop of cruise ships for 2010.

The most famous ships named, Nieuw Amsterdam and Queen Elizabeth were of course ocean liners, by Holland America Line and Cunard Line and delivered respectively in 1938 and 1940. Now, seventy and more years later, the two lines are still in existence and both part of Carnival Corp & PLC, and the two North Atlantic liners namesakes spring from the same basic design, called the Vista class.
The 92,000-ton Queen Elizabeth, at 965 feet, will carry 2,092 passengers in lower berths while the 86,200-ton Nieuw Amsterdam, at 936 feet, will carry 2,100 passengers. Queen Elizabeth is of a slightly elongated design that was originally used for Queen Victoria in 2007. The main difference between the two Queens will be in their internal decoration. Floated out at Fincantieri’s Monfalcone yard in January, the new Cunard ship will feature double and triple-height public rooms on a grand scale, luxurious rich wood panelling, intricate mosaics, hand-woven carpets, sparkling chandeliers and marble. Art Deco features will pay homage to the original Queen Elizabeth.
Nieuw Amsterdam on the other hand, the fourth ship to bear that name since 1906, will be similar to Eurodam of 2008, and will feature a new pan-Asian restaurant called Tamarind on one of the top decks and a casual Italian restaurant on the Lido deck, while her cabins will feature a new decor.
The 92,700-ton Costa Deliziosa, at 960 feet, has 2,260 lower berths. While also springing from liner company, but a more recent one, again now owned by Carnival Corp & PLC, she is another derivation of the Vista class. She and her sister ship Costa Luminosa will both be based out of Dubai, giving Costa a more homogenous product from that port and lots of balconies. In 2011, Costa Deliziosa will perform Costa’s first world cruise in many years.
Two more ships are raising much interest because they are both being completed to a new design, and also they will look more like ships than floating resort hotels, something that pleases those that follow ships.
First to be delivered will be Compagnie du Ponant’s 10,600-ton Le Boreal, which although a reasonable size at 466 feet, will only carry 264 passengers, all in outside cabins and 95% with verandas. With the introduction of this vessel and her sister ship, L’Austral, to follow next year, Compagnie du Ponant has decided to open all its ships to English-language cruisers at all times. Along with French cuisine and French wines, this should be a real winner. An indication of the quality of these ships can also be taken from the fact that upmarket operator Abercrombie & Kent has taken Le Boreal for its 2010-11 Antarctic season.
The other new design, again the first of a pair, is Oceania’s 66,000-ton Marina, which was floated out last Thursday. While to-day regarded as of moderate size, at 782 feet she is only eight feet shorter than that Cunard record breaker, the first Mauretania. She and her sister ship, to be named Riviera and to be delivered in 2012, will carry 1,260 passengers in plenty of space, and among her features are a Lalique staircase and interior design by Ralph Lauren Home. The two ships were designed by Yran & Storbraaten, the renowned Norwegian architects whose work has included ships for Sea Goddess, Seabourn and Silversea, in that order.
And one ship built as the final development of a tried and trusted old design, is the 116,000-ton Azura, which at 951 feet, will have 3,100 lower berths. Her design dating back to the first of the "Grand" class, that appeared twelve years ago, she will probably be the last to be built to this design since Princess has now developed a new prototype. Unlike her sister ship Ventura, which caters for families,  Azura, the "newest superliner for the UK," will be an adults only ship so it will be interesting to see how the initial ship reviews compare with the somewhat unfortunate Ventura, which has now apparently been tweaked into a more than satisfactory product for the UK market. But unfortunately for those who like quiet in deck, she will feature a movie screen on deck known as "Movies under the Stars" which some have called MUTS.
The most remarkable thing about all these ships, Queen Elizabeth, Nieuw Amsterdam, Costa Deliziosa, Le Boreal, Marina and Azura, and their sister ships, is that they were all built in Fincantieri shipyards. Non-Fincantieri ships like Seabourn Sojourn from Marriotti, Celebrity Eclipse (more on her in a future column, but see The New Celebrity Equinox August 03, 2009) from Meyer Werft, MSC Magnifica and Norwegian Eclipse from STX France and Allure of the Seas from STX Finland, have become the minority.
It has also been Fincantieri that has landed the first three new orders since the onset of the present world economic crisis. During February both Norwegian Epic and Azura completed their initial sea trials before returning to dry dock for completion and we will hear more of these ships later.

THIS WEEK IN CRUISING
New Ship Orders
After a lapse of a year with no new orders, shipyard order books have finally started to revive, even if only lightly. Carnival companies were first, with a 130,000-ton order for another sister to Carnival Dream and Magic, for delivery in 2012, and two orders in mid-February for a new 139,000-ton prototype ship for Princess, for delivery in 2012 and 2013, all three placed with Fincantieri.
Following them closely was a report last week from France that MSC was ordering a 148,000-ton slightly revised version of the Fantasia class (with 100 more cabins) from STX France, for delivery in 2012, with possibly a second order to follow. No details have been released yet on the new Princess ships, although some reports say they will be a fresher development of  Ruby Princess. Even if a new design they are bound top retain the most successful aspects of the present fleet.

Updates on Last Week’s Column
Last Monday, we said about Royal Caribbean that "the last time it tried to sell Celebrity in the Australian market, it ended up cancelling the programme (and there is still no word on whether Celebrity might try again once all their new ships are delivered)."
On Wednesday, an alert Lars at Cruise Line Fans posted the following "The Celebrity Century has been confirmed booked into several Australian ports in the late 2011 early 2012. So far this is all I know but hopefully Celebrity will issue a Press Release soon." And of course  Celebrity Millennium was there a year ago but had to cancel an Auckland to Sydney cruise because of a pod failure.
Christopher Wright at Mariport Limited in Digby NS has pointed out that Pearl Seas Cruises’ new ship, the 246-berth Pearl Mist, has not yet been accepted due to alleged fault, and has been laid up at Shelburne NS since November 20, 2009.

Boom Down Under – The End of EasyCruise? – The German Market

Australia/New Zealand, Canadian Cruises, Cunard Line, Deilmann Cruises, Great Lakes, Hapag LLoyd, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Orion Cruises, P&O, Pearl Seas, Princess Cruises, Royal Caribbean, Seabourn Cruises, Transocean Tours | Posted by cruisepeople
Feb 23 2010

by Mark Tre’ – "The Cruise Examiner"
This week’s story is all about Down Under, especially with the recent visits by David Dingle and Peter Shanks of Carnival UK and the announcement from Royal Caribbean that it would double its presence there next year.
We also note the possible demise of easyCruise and have a look at how the German market is developing.

STORY OF THE WEEK
Boom Down Under
As the world cruises all pass by Sydney in February, cruise line executives have the habit of escaping the northern winter and visiting Sydney for various events and announcements. This year was no exception, and while Carnival brands P&O Cruises, P&O Australia, Princess, Cunard and even Seabourn remain to the fore, Royal Caribbean has just announced that it is about to double its presence down under.
To begin with, David Dingle, ceo of Carnival UK (which includes Australia in its portfolio), visited down under late last month and revealed that twelve ships from Carnival brands P&O Australia, P&O Cruises, Princess Cruises, Cunard Line and Yachts of Seabourn would visit Australia this year. Half of these ships would be based there.
He also revealed that Carnival Australia would book 190,000 passengers this year and then went on to predict that that figure would rise to 300,000 in 2010-11 and 350,000 in 2011-12, a massive increase of almost 85% over two years.
Part of this growth will come from P&O Australia, which has added Pacific Jewel and will soon see the addition of Pacific Pearl when she transfers in to the down under fleet. Both ships are moving to Australia from the Ocean Village brand, which is being closed down.
Mr. Dingle’s visit was followed last week by Peter Shanks, president and managing director of Cunard Line, who revealed that Australia and Germany are Cunard’s fastest-growing markets, and that Cunard will probably attract 10,000 cruisers from Australia this year, up 25% on last year. Not bad for a line whose ships only call on Australia once a year on world cruises. Mr. Shanks sailed from Sydney on Saturday in Queen Victoria, on board which he will host a dinner for the ship’s full round the world cruisers.
Princess Cruises operate two Australian-based ships now in the 1,950-berth Sun Princess and Dawn Princess, which latter will leave Sydney on a world cruise for the Australian market on May 21 for the Mediterranean (with a special call at Gallipoli, where 8,141 Australians gave their lives in the First World War), the UK and Ireland, the United States, Panama, Mexico, Hawaii and the Pacific Islands before arriving home again on September 3.
However, more interesting news came from Gavin Smith, managing director of Royal Caribbean Cruises Australia, who last Thursday announced that in November 2011, Royal Caribbean will send its 2,112-berth Brilliance of the Seas to join the 2,000-berth Rhapsody of the Seas in Australia. He further commented that Royal Caribbean is considering basing a ship year-round in Australia starting in 2012.
This still leaves them a long way behind Carnival Australia but there has to be room in that market for more than just one cruising group, especially as Smith admitted that most of Royal Caribbean’s business in Australia presently comes from abroad. Radiance of the Seas will become the newest and largest ship to be based at Sydney.
Royal Caribbean Cruises has been chasing P&O in the UK market for several years now and has its 3,600-berth Independence of the Seas based in Southampton, to be joined this year by Celebrity Cruises’ 2,850-berth Celebrity Eclipse. In the UK, the two lines have developed a very strong local following and with the addition of some Vegemite and Fosters beer, there should be no reason they couldn’t do the same in Australia. Unfortunately, however, the last time it tried to sell Celebrity in the Australian market, it ended up cancelling the programme (and still  there is still no word on whether Celebrity might try again once all its new ships are delivered).
The false start by Celebrity might remind one of NCL, who also tried the Australian market with Norwegian Capricorn Line in 1997. But when Star Cruises took over NCL in 2001, the line was dissolved.
In terms of penetration of the cruise product down under, probably the easiest comparison is with fellow Commonwealth countries:

It should be noted that while New Zealand looks strong, its cruise market is made up mostly of foreigners. But however one might measure the Australian market, if it were developed to the same level as the UK and Canada it would be producing well in excess of 500,000 cruisers a year instead of the present 330,000. That would indicate that Mr Dingle is probably quite right when he predicts such huge growth for Carnival Australia, even when one realizes that he is predicting that his company alone will handle as many cruisers as the entire Australian market now produces for all lines.
Meanwhile, in Perth, Classic International Cruises has been operating Fremantle-based cruises since 2003. It now uses the 560-berth Athena, and in 2010-11 will add the 450-berth Princess Danae, working out of Singapore, for the Australian fly/cruise market. Meanwhile, Carnival Australia will also be sending its 1,485-berth Pacific Sun and Sun Princess out to Fremantle to compete with them in the Western Australian market.
And while Australia hasn’t seen any Italian ships since the days of Sitmar Cruises’ Fairstar and Fair Princess, the 2,260-berth Costa Deliziosa will be calling there on her 2011 maiden world cruise, adding a bit of a European taste to the product on offer there.
Bottom line to all this is when Australia might see its first cruise newbuilding. As David Dingle once pointed out, Ocean Village was the sort of brand that could only support second-hand ships. But will these same ships in the Australian market be able to produce strong enough support to make it feasible to build a new ship dedicated specifically to Australian cruising?

THIS WEEK IN CRUISING
The End of EasyCruise?
Is last week’s news the end of the line for easyCruise or are they just taking a year out? In August last year, after four years of rather inconsistent operations, Stelios Haji-Iouannou finally sold the rights to the use of the easyCruise name to Greek ferry operator Hellenic Seaways.
From starting off as a boiled down "no frills" cabin price only product on the Riviera it had evolved into a pretty standard budget Greek Island cruise operator, running 3- and 4-day cruises from Piraeus, by the time this sale took place. In return, Mr. Stelios obtained some interest in Hellenic Seaways.
The news broke last week, however, only six months after the Hellenic Seaways agreement, that easyCruise was putting its 2010 itineraries "on hold" and could not confirm any availability until it heard further from its new owners.
EasyCruise has has difficulties from its start in 2005. The 232-berth easyCruise 1 proved to be too small to be viable and had to be replaced by the 462-berth easyLife in 2008. The start-up line’s first venture into river cruising, the easyCruise 2 of 2006, had also closed down midway through its 2007 season.
In a related move, the original sister ship of EasyCruise 1 (both were former Renaissance ships), the 100-berth Clelia II, and named for Mr. Stelios’ sister Clelia, has been chartered for ten years to Australia’s Orion Cruises and is to join them in the summer of 2011 as Orion II. As Clelia II, she opened a Great Lakes cruise service for Travel Dynamics of New York in 2009 and will still return for one more Great Lakes season this year.
News is not all bad for the Great Lakes, however, as Pearl Seas Cruises’ 210-berth Pearl Mist will be cruising the Great Lakes this year and Hapag-Lloyd Cruises’ 420-berth Columbus will be returning in 2011.
But in the end, getting back to easyCruise, it seems "no frills" cruise lines are not such a great idea after all. Most people really do want the frills (and the thrills). Not only easyCruise, but Airtours’ Sun Cruises and the imminent demise of Ocean Village tend to point in this direction. There are two or three exceptions of course. Thomson maintains Island Cruises as a separate one-ship brand.
And Louis Cruises and Classic International Cruises still manage to carve out a niche for themselves among those who want a low-fare product. But the latter were never introduced as no frills products.
The German Market
Peter Shanks’ comment that Germany was one of Cunard’s two fastest-growing markets does not come as a complete surprise. Going all the way back to Norwegian American Cruises, which Cunard acquired in 1988, it has had a large German following. At first they stayed with Vistafjord, which had typically been about half full of Germans as she was based in Europe, where  Sagafjord was its American ship. Even after Vistafjord became Cunard’s Caronia she retained her strong German following and whenever RMS Queen Mary 2 calls on Hamburg she brings throngs out to see her.
To-day that German following has successfully been transferred to the new Queens and there was a very large number of German passengers on Queen Victoria‘s Transatlantic crossing to New York last month..
In the meantime, the "club cruise" ships of Aida Cruises have built up such a large following that there are now seven of them, ranging 1,185 to 2,050 berths, with two more on order. Aida is such a new name in the business that most people forget that it actually dates back to the 1960s as Deutsche Seerederi (DSR). Its first ship, Volkerfreundschaft, is still sailing as Classic International’s much-rebuilt Athena.
All but the original Aida, built in 1996 and now named AidaCara, were built in Germany, four by Meyer Werft and two by Aker MTW. To-day Aida is operated as the German division of Costa Cruises and its ships are all all registered in Genoa. Nevertheless, it is dedicated to the German-speaking market, so much so that one can even forget sometimes that Aida and Cunard share the same ownership.
The latest product on the German market, TUI Cruises’ 1,870-berth Mein Schiff, is a joint venture between Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines and TUI Travel, who also operate the upmarket Hapag-Lloyd Cruises. In the three months to December 2009, TUI Cruises, which began operations in May 2009, generated 122,000 passenger days, for a load factor of 69%.
The upmarket Hapag-Lloyd Cruises produced 77,000 passenger days on its four ships, a 77% load factor. Lower bookings reported in both markets reflected the economic conditions of the period in question. TUI Cruises will celebrate its first anniversary this year with a 12-night Round Britain cruise from Hamburg on May 9-21, with fares from €1,695 per person.
Meanwhile, Phoenix Reisen of Bonn have continued to expand until they now have four ocean ships, the 600-berth Amadea and 885-berth Albatros and the chartered Athena and 450-berth Alexander von Humboldt. They are due to take delivery in 2011 of the 1,200-berth Artania, built as the first Royal Princess and trading today as P&O’s Artemis. Then there is Hansa Kreutzfahrten of Bremen, with its 400-berth Delphin, 650-berth Delphin Voyager and the chartered 450-berth Princess Danae.
Other operators in the German market include three single-ship lines, Peter Deilmann Cruises of Neustadt, with its 550-berth Deutschland, Lord Nelson Seereisen, with its 780-berth Mona Lisa, now in British Columbia for the Winter Olympics, and Transocean Cruises of Bremen with its 590-berth Astor, not to mention numerous river operators.

Queen Victoria Arrives Early in New York – Veendam's Retreat – Queen Elizabeth Getting Ready – Ships at the Vancouver Olympics

Atlantic Crossing, Carnival Cruise Lines, Cunard Line, Holland America Line, News, Norwegian Cruise Lines, P&O, Positioning Voyages, Royal Caribbean | Posted by cruisepeople
Jan 17 2010

 

Queen Victoria Arrives Early in New York
On the final leg of her January Transatlantic voyage from Southampton, she arrived at New York early. Her original expected time of arrival had been about 18hr but she is arriving at noon instead. Those were treated to an introduction to New York by Ted Scull, writer and author of "The 100 Best Cruise Vacations," who is giving a running commentary from the bridge.
Passenger count for the Transatlantic crossing was reported to be 1,400 Brits, 220 Germans and only 97 Americans, plus others. Queen Victoria left Southampton on Monday, 4th January. She is due back at Southampton on 22nd April.
On one of her crossings, San Francisco to Sydney on 26th January, she will be followed six days later by P&O’s Arcadia, the ship that had originally been intended to be completed as Queen Victoria before there was a change of plan and the present ship was completed to a slightly longer design.

The Veendam‘s Retreat
This year’s contracted New York-Hamilton Front Street ship is due to start her season of 24 Bermuda cruises on 25th April. But an interesting story has been circulating in the meantime about her new Retreat area. In an effort to pack a few more passengers on board, last spring Holland America built cabins into the area that used to house her aft swimming pool.
It then replaced the pool with a new area called The Retreat, in which passengers sit in deck chairs with a few inches of water around their feet. Well, the Veendam‘s Retreat has apparently been leaking onto the outer decks and has created some problems. Not only that, some more cabins have been tacked on to the ship’s back end and she now has a ducktail and balconies that overhang her aft dining room, something that has quite ruined her appearance for some.
Holland America’s Rotterdam has been given a similar treatment, but with no ducktail, and four more of its ships are expected to receive similar modifications, including cabins that will open up directly onto the open promenade deck, between now and 2013.

Queen Elizabeth Getting Ready
Cunard’s new Queen Elizabeth has transferred from her building dock to her fitting out dock in Monfalcone. From the port bow quarter she is already painted in Cunard colours but the rest of the ship is still largely in primer as her new colours are being applied. The new Cunard ocean liner was floated out 5th January, when the honourary godmother for the occasion was Dennie Farmer, whose late husband served as Chief Engineer in both the original Queen Elizabeth and Queen Elizabeth 2.
The new Queen Elizabeth, whose master, Capt Chris Well, was a former master of Queen Mary 2, sets off from Southampton on her maiden voyage on 12th October this year and her maiden world cruise will leave Southampton on 5th January 2011.

THIS WEEK’S TOPIC
Ships at the Vancouver Olympics
With the Winter Olympics in Vancouver next month, several cruise ships will be arriving in a very off-season Vancouver, whose usual cruise season lasts from about May to October. Holland America’s Statendam is at Vancouver’s Ballantyne Pier, while Mona Lisa, built in 1967 as Swedish America Line’s fabulous Kungsholm, has passed through the Panama Canal, also bound for Vancouver.
With Statendam as the first arrival, two more Carnival Corporation & PLC ships will also be coming to Vancouver. Carnival Elation is due on 28th January and  Oosterdam on the 31st. These three will be chartered to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who intend to use them to house 5,000 security officers. Separately, Norwegian Star is expected on 10th February to be used as a hotel ship by Newwest Travel & Cruises of Edmonton.
Last year, Cruise Connections Charter Management launched a law suit for unspecified damages against the RCMP in the District of Columbia. This case was launched after the RCMP reneged on an original contract with Cruise Connections of Victoria to supply two ships from Carnival and one from Holland America, as Cruise Connections claimed it had lost a $13 million profit.
Originally, the deal was to have been for two Royal Caribbean ships, but this was later changed to three. The RCMP was accused of fudging the numbers in order to break that contract so that it could take advantage of the world recession to obtain lower prices.
Things did go the RCMP’s way in June 2009 when the DC court threw the law suit out on the grounds that it did not have jurisdiction to hear the case. But where the RCMP had wanted to get a better price, in April it had ended up settling direct with Carnival and Holland America but for a higher price.
What they got was a new contract under which they are now paying $76 million for three ships instead of $55.4 million. Where are the savings, people have been asking, as they contemplate a bill for an additional $21.4 million, but the RCMP have said that they cannot discuss the subject.
Meanwhile,Cruise Connections also launched a $75 million lawsuit against Newwest Travel, claiming that it had breached an exclusive agreement whereby they had originally agreed to bid jointly to the RCMP, something that Newwest withdrew from after its financial backer got cold feet. Meanwhile, Cruise Connections won the RCMP bid and Newwest Travel arranged a separate charter to use  Norwegian Star as a hotel ship. Where that case has gone we don’t know.
However, recently, Newwest has had to reduce its expected prices on the Norwegian Star after bookings did not come in at the originally established tariff. The starting prices has apparently now come down somewhat from the original idea of $700 per room per night for a range of 2- to 20-night packages, including meals, airport tranfers and Olympic transfers.
Norwegian Star will remain at her berth in North Vancouver for 20 days, as well as offering positioning cruises from Los Angeles via Victoria to Vancouver on 6th February, and back from Vancouver via San Francisco to Los Angeles on 2nd March, each of four days. Her 1,150 rooms will add about 10% to Vancouver’s hotel capacity for the duration of the games.
Mona Lisa, meanwhile, will be berthed up the coast a bit at Squamish, BC, which is on the road from Vancouver to the ski hills of Whistler. She will be based there from 26th January to 23rd March to house 1,000 Olympic workers, with another 1,000 ashore in Squamish and 4,000 at Whistler.
Such hotel ship charters seem to be a complicated and risky business, for everyone that is except the cruise lines, for whom it seems most lucrative.
(Source: By Mark Tré – Cybercruises.com)

Cruising in "the Dominions"

Africa, Canadian Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cunard Line, Discovery World Cruises, Fred Olsen, Holland America Line, MSC, P&O, Princess Cruises, Regent Seven Seas, Silversea, South Pacific | Posted by cruisepeople
Dec 15 2009

Years ago, the Commonwealth countries of Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa were known as "the Dominions" – indeed Canada called itself the Dominion of Canada until the 1950s.

The Dominions, which had been served by lines such as Canadian Pacific, Cunard, White Star, P&O, Shaw Savill and New Zealand Shipping, came to the aid of the UK in two world wars, long before the United States entered either.

To-day, however, very few people realize that these four countries contribute about 1.3 million passengers to the world cruise market. This is more passengers than Germany, Italy or Spain and almost as many as the UK. So let’s have a look at the cruising market in these Commonwealth countries to-day

Canada: 775,000 "Invisible" Canadians
Earlier this month CLIA acknowledged the importance of Canadians to the cruising market, in announcing that the next Cruise 360 travel agents’ conference would be held in Vancouver on June 2-6, 2010. CLIA estimates the size of the Canadian market travelling in its ships at 775,000, or triple the size of a decade ago. This is larger than all European countries except the UK and Germany.

The Canadian market has always been easy to miss as most Canadians travel across the longest undefended border in the world, that with the United States, to join ships that are already full of Americans. Thus, unlike Australia, which is geographically distinct from other countries, Canadian cruisers have become a sort of "invisible minority."

One interesting thing that unites Canada and Australia, however, is that RMS Queen Mary 2 visits both during the course of the year, visiting Quebec in the summer or autumn and Sydney as part of her world cruise, thus being the largest ship to call at each country.
At one time, Eastern Canada did have its own small cruise market, with ships from Cunard Line and later the Soviet  Alexandr Pushkin and the Polish Stefan Batory, operating round trip cruises from Montreal. But over the years Montreal and Quebec became part of a one-way Canada/New England cruise rotation whereby ships shuttled back and forth between Montreal and increasingly Quebec in the north and New York or Boston in the south.

Meanwhile, Vancouver, at least up until the past two or three years, had acted as the base for the Alaska fleet.

However, history was made at the Port of Québec this October as more than 13,000 cruise passengers embarked or disembarked in one 48-hour period, with three ships, Crown Princess, Norwegian Spirit and Costa Atlantica, also making inaugural calls. And inward visits into the St Lawrence in 2009 totalled 166,000 passengers on 21 ships.

On the west coast, however, Vancouver, with close to500,000 passengers, 80% of them American, embarking there, remains the cruise capital of Canada, despite the loss of half its Alaska business to Seattle and a general reduction in the Alaska cruise trade because of the Alaska head tax.

Australia: 330,000 Cruisers With a Geographical Base
Unlike Canada, Australia is so far removed from the rest of the world that it has always had its own ships cruising from Australian ports full of mainly Australian (and of course New Zealand) passengers. Starting with P&O ships and a number of ships from Sitmar, which was later taken over by P&O Princess, the two largest carriers to-day are both branches of Carnival, in P&O Cruises Australia and Princess Cruises. Carryings in the Australian market were about 330,000 in 2008.

P&O Cruises has expanded from two ships to four in a fairly short time, with the delivery this month of Pacific Jewel, ex-Ocean Village 2, and in 2010 its fourth ship, Pacific Pearl, now Ocean Village. Having already acquired Regal Princess, now Pacific Dawn, this means that the flagships of the P&O Cruises fleet in Australia are now the last of the Sitmar ships.

The once Crown Princess and Regal Princess were introduced in 1990-91, while the old Fair Princess was still cruising from Australia.
Last Thursday, December 10, proved to be a big day for Sydney, with Diamond Princess arriving first, followed by  Pacific Jewel, fresh from her makeover in Singapore, and then Sun Princess. Nearly 10,000 passengers were handled in Sydney that day.

With Diamond, Sun and Dawn Princess, Pacific Dawn, Sun and Jewel all based in Sydney either full time or for the summer, the Australian market has finally shown it can support not just one or two ships but two fleets of ships with P&O Cruises and Princess Cruises each having its own fleet of Australia-based ships now. And in the west, Classic International Cruises has its Athena now based in Fremantle on a seasonal basis.

New Zealand: 119,000, Mostly Foreigners
In the 2008/09 season, 118,987 cruisers were reported to have left New Zealand ports, of whom almost 90% were visitors, mainly American, Canadian and Australian. About 25,000 were actually New Zealanders. This total of almost 119,000 was up from 40,000 in 2004/05 so the market has almost tripled in just four years.

The local New Zealand market is strong enough, however, that P&O Cruises will lengthen its 2010 Auckland season for  Pacific Sun from two months to twenty-four, after the 2009 season sold out with 12,000 Kiwis cruising in her over just two months.

South Africa: 70,000 in MSC Sinfonia Alone
South Africa this year has its largest cruise ship yet in the 2,100-passenger MSC Sinfonia, now based at Durban for the 2009/10 winter season and working for South Africa-based Starlight Cruises. MSC Sinfonia is expected to carry some 70,000 cruisers this season and replaces  MSC Melody and MSC Symphony/Rhapsody before her.
Spring will also see Holland America Line’s Noordam and Westerdam in Durban and Port Elizabeth, not as cruise ships but as accommodation ships for the 2010 World Cup in Cape Town
Other than that, there is no indigenous South African cruise market other than those operated by Starlight Cruises, although other ships calling in South Africa this season will be Queen Mary 2, Balmoral, Discovery, Seven Seas Voyager, Silver Wind, Crystal Serenity and Columbus, all making calls on world cruises or longer voyages.

Conclusions
For those who like statistics, here are the estimated non-US markets by rank, in number of cruise passengers, with Commonwealth countries shown in red:
UK – 1,500,000
Germany – 907,000
Canada – 775,000
Italy – 682,000
Spain – 497,000
Australia – 330,000
France – 310,000
Scandinavia – 123,000
New Zealand – 119,000
Benelux – 92,000
South Africa – 75,000
Switzerland – 62,000
Commonwealth – 2,799,000
Continent – 2,673.000
The Commonwealth countries thus total 2,799,000 cruisers while Continental European countries total 2,673,000 – a very different way of looking at things, but one that is no longer current since the UK joined the European Union.
(Source: By Mark Tré – Cybercruises.com)

Royal Princess to Leave Princess Cruises Fleet and Join British Sister Line P&O Cruises

P&O, Princess Cruises | Posted by cruisepeople
Dec 09 2009

Princess Cruises®

Small Ship Will Transfer in May 2011; Spring Deployment Changed

One of the small ships of Princess Cruises, the 710-passenger Royal Princess, will depart the line’s fleet in spring 2011, transferring to sister company P&O Cruises in the U.K. The ship will be renamed Adonia.

As a result, five sailings in April and May will be cancelled, and in place of these a 26-day South Pacific and Andes Explorer cruise will be offered prior to the transfer.

The ship’s 2010 cruise programme includes sailings to the Amazon, Caribbean, Panama Canal, Alaska, Hawaii and French Polynesia.

With the transfer of Royal Princess there will be one less Princess ship in Alaska for the 2011 season, though full details are not yet available. During summer 2010, the ship will sail on a 14-day roundtrip “Connoisseur” cruises from Seattle to Alaska.

The following 2011 sailings are being cancelled:

· April 6, 2011 10-day Tahiti & Polynesia
· April 16, 2011 10-day Tahiti & Polynesia
· April 26, 2011 12-day Hawaii & Tahiti
· May 8, 2011 10-day Hawaiian Islands
· May 18, 2011 1-day coastal

The new 26-day cruise that replaces these sailings will depart April 6, 2011 and travel between Papeete, Tahiti and Fort Lauderdale. Ports of call will include Bora Bora, Moorea, Pitcairn Island (for scenic cruising), Easter Island, Pisco (San Martin), Lima (Callao for Machu Picchu overland excursion), Quito (Manta), Panama Canal Transit, San Blas, and Limón. Fares begin at $4,145 per person, double occupancy.

The ship will then go into a drydock in the Bahamas to change her livery prior to joining the P&O Cruises fleet in May 2011.

Royal Princess joined the Princess fleet in 2007, having originally been built in 2001 for Renaissance Cruises.

Additional information about Princess Cruises is available through The Cruise People at 1-800-268-6523.