Sun.Star Pampanga

Subic keen on becoming next cruise ship playground

-

SUBIC BAY FREEPORT The Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA) is keen on positionin­g its port to become the next playground for royal Caribbean cruise ships starting next year.

SBMA Chairman and Administra­tor Wilma Eisma, who met here recently with Dr. Zinan Liu and other officials of Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal (RCI) over the weekend, said that the Subic community is hoping to generate more businesses with the growing cruise ship tourism industry in the Asian region.

“We hope that Subic would be the next cruise ship playground. And we are very excited over this prospect,” Eisma told RCI officials, as she briefed them on the potentials of the Subic Bay area as cruise ship destinatio­n.

“We can offer you the best tourism facilities and services for your passengers and crew, highly memorable and tailored tourism experience­s to meet the expectatio­ns of your clients, and a safe environmen­t that will be very conducive to your business,” Eisma added.

Liu, who is RCI’s president for China and North Asia Pacific Region, arrived in Subic on Saturday along with his assistant Anna Lian and company director Antonio Muresu, and escorted by Isabela ViceGovern­or Antonio Albano.

Eisma brought the visitors to Alava Pier here, where the firm’s MS Oasis of the Seas cruise liner may dock once Subic is included in the ship’s Asian itinerary.

The RCI, which is a cruise line brand based in Miami, Florida and owned by Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (RCCL), a global cruise vacation company which controls 22 percent of the cruise market worldwide, is said to be scouting for newer attraction­s for the growing Asian cruise ship market.

Eisma, along with the SBMA Cruise Ship Technical Working Group, stressed that her administra­tion is positionin­g Subic as the new Asian destinatio­n to meet such growing demand.

The MS Oasis of the Seas is said to provide some of the most modern cruise experience­s today with facilities like the Central Park, Boardwalk, Royal Promenade, Pool and Sports Zone, Vitality at Sea Spa and Fitness Center, Entertainm­ent Place, and Youth Zone, which features a surf simulator, cantilever­ed whirlpools suspended 112 feet above the ocean, and zip line.

The ship can carry over 6,000 passengers and 3,900 crews and officers in its 16 passenger decks.

During the preliminar­y meeting with another RCI team headed by Capt. Nikolaos Antalis in November this year, it was noted that because of its gigantic size, Oasis of the Seas could only use the Port of Subic, among the many ports in the Philippi nes.

During their two-day stay here, Liu and the other RCI officials said they were impressed over the potential of the Subic Bay area, noting that it has attraction­s in culture, history and religion, aside from modern amenities.

Eisma toured the cruise ship officials around Subic Bay and brought them to see Zoobic Safari, Ocean Adventure, and Segara Villas on Saturday, and brought them as well to the famed Philippine heritage destinatio­n Las Casas Filipinas De Acuzar in Bagac, Bataan last Sunday.

Last July, RCCL Vice President for New Business Developmen­t John Tercek also visited Subic to assess its readiness as a cruise ship destinatio­n.

Eisma said Tercek similarly cited the potentials of Subic and advised the SBMA to step up efforts in developing the free port to address the demand.

— Ric Sapnu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines