Port of Bilbao Closes Season with 80 Ships and 150K Passengers

The Port of Bilbao has concluded the 2023 season with 80 cruise ships and 148,791 passengers, according to a statement.

The last cruise ship of the year was the Bolette, which docked on November 16.

Most of the tourists have been transit passengers coming from the UK (41%), North America (27%), or Germany (13%). Thirteen  cruise ships made their first call at the port in 2023.

“We continue to position the Port of Bilbao and its terminal in Getxo on the route of the major cruise shipping companies, and this is making a significant contribution to the increase in tourism in the Basque Country and, by extension, to boosting our economy,” said Ricardo Barkala, president of the Port Authority of Bilbao. “As a result, we continue to support this activity and to promote the development of the economic fabric of Bizkaia and the Basque Country”.

“In a sector as competitive as the cruise sector, the shipping companies choose Bilbao because of the infrastructure and services it offers, the operability of the terminal, the flexibility and ease with which stopovers can be managed, and the convenience for their passengers,” Barkala added.

In 2019, 50 cruise ships arrived at the Port of Bilbao. In 2020, cruises were suspended due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Fourteen calls were made in 2021, and 78 cruise ships arrived at the port in 2022.

The Port Authority has announced the BilbOPS project to deploy shore power technology in several of the port’s docks, including the cruise ship docks. The aim of the initiative is to improve service delivery, and, in turn, contribute to environmental sustainability. The facilities will become operational in the beginning of 2026.

Pleasant surprises at off-the-radar ports

One of the pleasures of cruising is discovering places that aren’t necessarily on your radar.

In planning a land vacation, people naturally pick destinations and sights they’ve been pining to see. So, too, for cruising. But there are often ports on an itinerary that aren’t at the top of the list.

And sometimes you pick a cruise for the ship, not the destinations. That was the case with a recent cruise on the Anthem of the Seas, the newest ship from Royal Caribbean International.

After an April debut, the ship has been stationed in Europe this summer, doing mostly 14-night itineraries, which is a bit too long for my schedule.

One of the few seven-night itineraries featured several ports I would not have picked solely for the destinations. But the two ports in northern Spain — Gijon and Bilbao — were thoroughly enjoyable.

Gijon has a pleasant downtown. We stopped at a bakery for some early morning pastries, and for coffee at a tavern that had plenty of personality. We rode the bus to Oviedo, a bigger, inland town famed for its siderias, or cider restaurants.

In Bilbao, there’s far more see beyond its world-renowned Guggenheim Museum, including a chic financial district and a charming medieval old town.

Our third stop, Guernsey, a British dependency off the coast of Normandy, offered a scenic shore hike on a well-marked trail through an amazing diversity of foliage.

The final stop was in Le Havre, the French port at the mouth of the Seine River.  Le Havre itself is not very picturesque, having been 80% destroyed in World War II. There were several excursions to Paris, but the prospect of a two-and-a-half-hour bus trip each way discouraged us from that option.

Instead, we took a taxi over the last bridge on the Seine to the town of Honfleur on the south bank of the river. The town is not much more than a harbor, a church and two main streets, but the harbor is quaint and lined with cafes, and the main streets had enough intriguing restaurants and shops to make me want to return.

I had never heard of Honfleur before. Thanks to my cruise I will be looking for an opportunity to go back.