Miami Herald

Carnival has a new ship in the works. What it means for cruising and the Doral company

- BY VINOD SREEHARSHA vsreeharsh­a@miamiheral­d.com

cruise industry, which employs thousands of people in South Florida and brings millions of tourists to the region, has a new ship in the works.

Doral-based Carnival Corp. has ordered a new Excel ship, the 10th in that class in the company’s global fleet, the company said on Tuesday. Carnival signed an agreement with German shipbuilde­r Meyer Werft to have the 180,000ton vessel ready by spring 2027. Excel is Carnival’s largest and newest category of cruise ship.

The developmen­t is yet another sign that the cruise industry is back from COVID-19.

WHAT CARNIVAL EXECUTIVE SAYS

“Coming out of the pandemic, demand is great,” Christine Duffy, president of Carnival Cruise Line, said Tuesday at an Axios event at The Hanger in Coconut Grove. “You see a lot more capacity moving into particular­ly the U.S. market.”

That has been evident at Florida’s major seaports: PortMiami, Port Canaveral and Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, which have built new terminals or welcomed new cruise lines.

During fiscal year 2023 — which ended on Sept. 30 for the cruise industry — PortMiami, Florida’s largest port, set a record for annual passengers. During that time, 7.3 million passengers traveled in and out, nearly twice the four million passengers the prior fiscal year.

Travel through PortMiami exceeded by 7% its previous record of 6.8 million passengers set in fiscal year 2019, before the pandemic disrupted the industry.

CARNIVAL’S NEW SHIP

Carnival’s new ship, its first new order in five years, can carry more than 6,400 guests and will be powered by liquefied natural gas.

It will be the fourth Excel ship in the company’s namesake Carnival Cruise Line brand and a sister to Mardi Gras, Carnival CeleThe bration and Carnival Jubilee.

The company, which carries 13 million passengers per year, said Excel ships have proven popular with passengers and will allow it to offer more cruises.

This would be the company’s second new ship to be completed between now and 2027. The other is expected to be delivered in 2025.

Starting in 2027, the company sees itself adding one or two ships a year.

The Miami-Dade company is also seeking to reduce its approximat­ely $36 billion in debt, Duffy said.

“We are very committed to focusing on the balance sheet,” the executive said in a 16-minute Q&A with Dan Primack, a business editor at Axios.

Carnival currently has 93 ships and 120,000 employees.

Duffy, who as a teenager sought to work as a flight attendant but was rejected by Pan American Airways for being too short, got her start in the travel industry as a receptioni­st.

At her Coconut Grove appearance, she also addressed several other issues related to the company: On whether the company felt pressure to outdo competitor Royal Caribbean’s recently launched Icon of the Seas, the world’s largest cruise ship: “Years ago, Carnival Cruise Line delivered and built the biggest ship — Carnival Destiny. I think at this point, size does not really matter so much.”

On the case of two Americans who last week said they were raped while onshore in the Bahamas during a Carnival cruise: “That specific incident is under investigat­ion. And until that’s concluded we are advising our guests not to go to that beach or resort. ... We met with Bahamian government officials on Friday and we are working closely with them.”

She did not address an incident involving a Carnival ship hitting a pier last week in Ocho Rios, Jamaica. The chartered rock-and-roll cruise was forced to abandon the first pier it docked at due to high winds after many passengers were already on shore.

 ?? ?? Christine Duffy
Christine Duffy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States