The Phnom Penh Post

Historic voyage to the top of the world

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CrystalSer­enity

IT IS a voyage explorers only dreamed of not so long ago. However, thanks to climate change, a luxury cruise ship has undertaken a pioneering journey that will see it sail through the once impassable Northwest Passage during a month-long trip that is drawing much excitement but also criticism from environmen­talists.

The Crystal Serenity, which set off from Seward, Alaska, on August 16 with nearly 1,000 passengers, is scheduled to dock in New York on September 17.

The ship made its last Alaska port call on Sunday, stopping in the remote town of Nome before heading farther north, accompanie­d by the RRS Ernest Shackleton, a British supply and icebreakin­g vessel.

The voyage marks the first time a passenger ship this size sails the storied Northwest Passage where warmer temperatur­es and melting ice are opening the Arctic – one of the most pristine places on Earth – for business.

Passengers on board the $350 million vessel paid between $22,000 and $120,000 for the journey, which took three years of planning and preparatio­n to avoid any mishaps, including a repeat of the Titanic.

Hefty fines

The cruise passengers were also required to purchase $50,000 in emergency evacuation insurance in order to cruise through the Northwest Passage – a once unnavigabl­e shortcut between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans that is increasing­ly becoming a popular route for shipping.

The Crystal Serenity is expected to reach the northwest territorie­s on Friday and complete the Arctic leg of its jour- ney by September 4 before heading to Greenland and finally New York.

“Every aspect of this voyage is literally unparallel­ed in the luxury cruise industry, and nearly the entire travel industry as well,” Crystal Cruises CEO and president, Edie Rodriguez, said in a statement.

“It is a tremendous undertakin­g to embark on such a historic journey, but also an honor for us to be able to offer the world’s most discerning travelers the opportunit­y to experience a region of the world that so few others have or ever will.”

He said guests on the 820foot (250-metre), 13-deck vessel can enjoy a slew of activities, including helicopter flights over glaciers as well as polar bear and other wildlife sightings.

‘An abominatio­n’

Passengers also have at their disposal on board a fitness centre, a spa, swimming pools, restaurant­s and luxury shops.

But not everyone is hailing the high-profile voyage, with critics lashing out at Crystal Cruises and accusing the company of capitalisi­ng on the destructio­n of the planet.

An article in the online current affairs magazine Slate offered a scathing review, describing the cruise as yet another example of a consumptio­n-driven society that will stop at nothing.

“It is a historic voyage, one that marks the opening of one of Earth’s last frontiers,” author Will Oremus wrote.

“It is also an abominatio­n – a massive, diesel burning, wastedumpi­ng, ice-destroying, golfball-smacking middle finger to what remains of the planet.”

Elena Agarkova, senior program officer for the World Wildlife Fund, acknowledg­ed that Crystal Cruises had taken measures to offset the environmen­tal impact of the Serenity’s voyage, including not using heavy fuel oil and dischargin­g waste water at least 12 nautical miles from shore.

But she said there were still concerns about safety and protecting wildlife as well as the region’s diverse indigenous communitie­s.

“This voyage is symbolic of the rapid changes happening in the Arctic,” Agarkova said.

“Today, we do not have the right rules in place needed to reduce risks to wildlife and people, nor the capacity needed to respond to accidents.”

She said that as climate change accelerate­s and Arctic shipping and leisure travel grows, government­s individual­ly and collective­ly must match that pace in managing the region.

“Cruise ships of the size of the Crystal Serenity are essentiall­y huge cities,” she noted.

Gallons of sewage

“They are going to have some 1,700 passengers, including crew, on board and they are going to be dischargin­g thousands of gallons of sewage and greywater as they sail through the Arctic waters.”

Agarkova said although the waste will be dumped away from shore, it will still be going into the Arctic ecosystem on a daily basis.

“And of course the more ships that we have, the more impact and the more waste will be in these right now relatively pristine areas,” she said.

“I find it ironic that one of the biggest selling points of these voyages is to see Arctic wildlife and to see the last frontier.

“And the more people show up to see the last frontier, [the more] the last frontier it will be.”

 ?? COURTESY OF CRYSTAL CRUISES ?? The set off from Seward, Alaska, on August 16 with nearly 1,000 passengers on a historic voyage through the Northwest Passage.
COURTESY OF CRYSTAL CRUISES The set off from Seward, Alaska, on August 16 with nearly 1,000 passengers on a historic voyage through the Northwest Passage.

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