MSC Announces Grand Voyage to Shanghai

MSC Cruises has officially announced plans to make its first sailing to China, with the newly-renovated MSC Lirica calling in Shanghai on May 1, 2016 after having traveled across continents.

The 65,000-ton ship will make the company’s maiden call in China’s biggest megalopolis after a 60-day round-the-world Grand Voyage which departs on March 3, 2016 from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“We are delighted to once more be able to offer our guests a brand new itinerary – from Brazil to China via Europe – which offers the chance to visit some of the most appealing places on earth, certainly across a huge array of people and cultures,” said MSC Cruises CEO, Gianni Onorato.

Onorato added: “This new Grand Voyage offering is proof of our steadfast commitment to offer our guests innovative and sought-after destinations. As MSC Cruises continues to expand the destinations it calls – such as Cuba which we recently announced – we are further enhancing our global offering while providing travelers best-in-class experiences and service.”

MSC Cruises is offering travelers the opportunity to choose from three different versions of the Grand Voyage, with the ability to embark in either Rio de Janeiro in Brazil (60 nights), Genoa in Italy (41 nights) or Dubai in the United Arab Emirates (26 nights), before arriving in Shanghai.


Shanghai at night taken by Dave Jones

Before setting sail, MSC Lirica will be fully renovated and enlarged under MSC Cruises’ Renaissance Program, which entails a comprehensive overhaul of the ship due to be completed in November 2015.

Prices for the full 60-day Grand Voyage on MSC Lirica will start at $4,799 per person. Included in the price are beverage and laundry packages as well as 8 shore excursions.

During the first leg of MSC Lirica’s 60-day journey, the ship will depart on March 3, 2016 from Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro and sail north along the coast of Brazil – with calls in Buzios, Salvador, Maceio and Fortaleza. The ship  will then cross the Atlantic on a northeast course towards the Canary Islands – with a stop in the city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife – before reaching mainland Europe and visiting Cadiz, Spain.

From there, MSC Lirica will call the three largest ports in the Mediterranean – Barcelona, Spain; Marseille, France; and Genoa, Italy – providing travelers an opportunity to embark in any of these ports in Europe and providing maximum flexibility as guests journey towards Asia.

After leaving Genoa, MSC Lirica will call Naples, Italy and the island of Crete with Heraklion in Greece. The ship then heads south to Aqaba in Jordan; Muscat, Oman; and Khor Al Fakhan and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.  The ship is scheduled to stay in Dubai overnight and travelers interested in sailing from Dubai to Shanghai will have the ability to embark.

During the last leg of the journey, MSC Lirica sets sail towards the East and the Indian cities of Goa and Cochin, prior to calling Colombo, the capital city of Sri Lanka. She then heads to Phuket, Thailand, and Penang and Port Kelang/Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, before reaching Singapore.

After an overnight stay in Singapore, the ship will bring its guests to Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam and then to visit Hong Kong. Shanghai is the next call and includes an overnight stay before sailing across the China sea to Fukuoka in Japan. From the Land of the Rising Sun, MSC Lirica heads back to the high seas one more time, returning to Shanghai on May 1, 2016.

The Future of U.S. Cruises to Cuba

Havana Cuba.
Havana will soon be bustling with U.S. cruise passengers

Although U.S. laws still prohibit leisure travel to Cuba, cruise lines are waiting with plans in hand for the green light. Since last month’s announcement that Fathom, Carnival Corporation’s new social impact brand, was granted a license to sail from the Port of Miami starting next May, the floodgates seem ready to open.

Although Fathom is accepting bookings, negotiations with Cuba are not yet complete, and settling on ports of call remains up in the air. Rates for Cuba cruises, which start at $2,990 per person, are double those for Fathom’s originally announced Dominican Republic sailings, and Cuban fees will be tacked on to the cruise fare.

Meanwhile, Tom Baker, co-owner of Houston-based Cruise Center, has found land tours extremely high-priced in comparison to cruises.

“We’re looking at around $1,000 per day for a destination that is not a luxury experience,” he said. “I’m sure the tour operators are doing wonderful things, but they are still left with mediocre hotels, terrible roads and buses that may or may not maintain air conditioning. So I went to Cuba Cruise, where the highest-priced staterooms run around $3,000 for two people on a weeklong cruise, including shore excursions and an all-inclusive beverage package. You don’t have to take long bus rides, and both food and accommodations are going to be comfortable, at the very least.”

Baker originally booked a people-to-people cruise for himself, then decided to see if a LGBT group he was working with wanted to go as well. Now, he has more than 200 clients sailing on a Jan. 1 cruise, and the number of passengers continues to grow, all with little marketing.

Bonnie Habel, president of Fuller Travel in San Antonio, sees the current requirement for cruise passengers to interact with locals on the ground as another positive selling point.

“A lot of work and thought goes into those excursions, and it’s not just shopping and seeing a historic site,” she pointed out. “And with the cruise, people get a predictable level of food and lodging.”

One of the most intriguing aspects of the Fathom announcement is that president Tara Russell is also tasked with finding social impact cruise opportunities for other brands in Carnival Corporation’s huge fleet.

Habel and others believe they could sell the highest-level accommodations on a luxury ship in Cuba.

“If Carnival is smart, they will put Seabourn Cruise Line in there,” Habel said. “The highest-priced accommodations would fly out the door.”

Cuban-born Frank Del Rio, president and CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., called the Carnival move a “critical first step.”

“Cuba will shine new light on the Caribbean, still the biggest cruise destination in the world,” he said.

According to Del Rio, Cuba has five or six ports with qualities “as different as New York and Texas,” and he believes all three of his brands — Norwegian Cruise Line, Oceania Cruises and Regent Seven Seas Cruises — could differentiate themselves enough to more than satisfy the desires of various clienteles.

In addition to Fathom, a group of Florida ferry companies has been approved by the U.S. government to operate service to Cuba, including United Caribbean Lines, run by veteran cruise executive Bruce Nierenberg. His company is working with Haimark Ltd. to put the 210-passenger Saint Laurent into operation as the first small ship operated by a U.S. cruise line to circumnavigate Cuba in more than four decades. The line will offer nine-night roundtrip departures from Miami to Cuba beginning Feb. 20, pending final government approval.

 

Norwegian Cruise Line Ltd. eyes Cuba and China


Norwegian Star in Cabo San Lucas, by Dave Jones

By Michelle Baran
One day after announcing that Norwegian Cruise Line will sail to destinations in Asia and Australia for the first time since 2002, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. revealed it is looking into opportunities for deployment in both China and Cuba.

“We believe that once Cuba opens up totally, it’s going to be a real windfall for the industry,” Frank Del Rio, president and CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., said during the company’s second-quarter earnings call on Tuesday.

Del Rio said that the company has already applied for a license to operate Cuba cruises with the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control and an export license with the Commerce Department. “And we have engaged the Cuban government,” said Del Rio.

He said that a possible Cuba deployment is still a work in progress, but that the company is hopeful it will receive the applicable permissions from both governments before the year is over. “And then we’ll have an interesting dilemma on our hands of what vessels to deploy to Cuba and from where,” said Del Rio.

He said that of the company’s brands, the first vessel to sail to Cuba would most likely come from the Oceania fleet.

As for speculation about whether the company’s Asia expansion would include deploying a vessel in China, Del Rio said that China plans aren’t finalized but that the market is desirable.

“You hear the other lines say how their most profitable ships are based in China, and so we want in on that action,” said Del Rio. “It’s now no longer a startup market if you will. … And given that the Norwegian fleet will have grown to 17 vessels, its’ time to deploy some tonnage there.”

He added that if the company decides to go to China, a ship will not arrive there before 2017.

In February, Del Rio told investors that China was being studied as a deployment option for one of its ships on order for 2018.