Cape Argus

Cruise liner expands calls

- Barbara Cole

CRUISE line passengers are going to get the exclusive use of the pristine beaches of an island destinatio­n 200 nautical miles from Maputo in future.

MSC Cruises has signed a deal with the Mozambique government for the exclusive use of Pomene Bay – a Unesco World Heritage Site – by visiting passengers.

MSC will be putting up temporary wooden structures to accommodat­e passengers, who will start arriving on the island in November, and who will initially arrive on the MSC Sinfonia.

Then, from the following cruise season, they will be able to get to the new destinatio­n on the cruise itinerary from a new cruise liner plying local waters, the MSC Musica, which will replace the 12-year-old MSC Sinfonia, which has been operating from Durban – her South African home port-of-call – for several years.

MSC Musica, which has 300 extra cabins, is capable of accommodat­ing an additional 750 passengers, increasing the number of passengers on any given cruise to 3 200.

The ship, which is 8 years old, had been brought in to meet the increased demand for cruising, said Ross Volk, the managing director of MSC Cruises South Africa.

About 104 000 passengers have already experience­d cruising aboard the MSC Sinfonia since the current season started last November.

And 60% of those passengers were previously disadvanta­ged Africans, who have more disposable income than they previously had, and who are now enjoying cruising.

“It is still early days, but we are expecting some to return as repeat customers,” Volk said.

Details of the new destinatio­n and the new ship were announced in Johannesbu­rg, and it was so important to MSC and the local market that Luca Biondolill­o, MSC’s chief communicat­ions officer, flew out from MSC’s head office in Geneva.

MSC Cruises is the biggest privately-owned cruise brand in the world.

Biondolill­o said MSC Cruises was in the middle of a €9 billion (R131 bn) investment plan to build 11 new megaships – four were currently under constructi­on – and, as a result, the workforce would increase by another 55 000 in the next 10 years. “Not only have we many more ships than anyone else, but we have a capacity like no one else,” he said.

MSC cruise liners welcomed 1.8 million passengers last year and, by 2026, the fleet projects it will carry five million passengers a year.

The company is committed to employing 120 South Africans on its ships around the world, although last year it exceeded that target, Volk said.

 ??  ?? ON THE HIGH SEAS: Cruise line MSC’s new ship, Musica, will make its debut on local waters in November.
ON THE HIGH SEAS: Cruise line MSC’s new ship, Musica, will make its debut on local waters in November.

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