Orlando Sentinel

TWO OF THE DISNEY CRUISE LINE’S

- By Richard Tribou

three new ships are headed to Port Canaveral.

The Disney Cruise Line is no stranger to parking its new ships at Port Canaveral, and that looks to be where the line’s next two new ships will call home.

Port Canaveral CEO John Murray commented on Disney’s forthcomin­g vessels during last week’s Canaveral Port Authority Board of Commission­ers meeting, which also solidified the port’s deal to bring a new Carnival Cruise Line ship to the port.

“What’s going to impact Port Canaveral in the near term, you’ve got Carnival [that] will have the first ship immediatel­y followed a year later by Disney immediatel­y followed a year later by another Disney ship,” he said. “Disney’s got a total of three. We don’t know if we’ll have two or three, but they’re coming to Port Canaveral.”

The news isn’t a surprise since all four of the existing ships in the Disney Cruise Line fleet have made Port Canaveral their home port when they debuted, but this is the first official statement regarding the new ships’ eventual home. The line’s two current biggest ships, Disney Dream and Disney Fantasy, call the port home yearround, while the older ships Disney Magic and Disney Wonder rotate home ports including Port Canaveral while also serving Europe and Alaska.

Disney’s new ships will be powered by liquefied natural gas, which is a cleaner burning fuel than what’s currently used. Internatio­nal maritime law for air emission standards is pushing cruise lines to make the switch, which in turn is pushing North American ports to make adjustment­s ahead of their debut.

“If you just look at the numbers, we’re the second largest cruise port in the world,” Murray said. “There’s 26 of these ships on order right now. You have to know they’re coming here. They’re coming to Miami. They’re coming to Port Everglades.”

The yet-to-be-named Carnival ship will arrive at Port Canaveral in 2020 and eventually use the brand-new $150 million Terminal 3. That will be the first LNG-powered ship to be based in North America. Murray said the first Disney ship could arrive to Port Canaveral as early as November 2021.

Though Carnival has a deal with Shell and a planned method in place to refuel the new LNG-powered ship using a barge, down the road, Murray said the port will need a different method.

“When Disney comes in with their assets and when we have multiple vessels fueling at the same time, we’re going to have to grow into a different type of operation,” he said. “We don’t know what that is right now, but we’re looking at all the options. We as facilitato­rs are trying to guide the cruise lines in a direction that makes the most sense for Port Canaveral.”

The three new Disney ships are slated to debut in 2021, 2022 and 2023. All three ships are on order with Meyer Werft shipyard in Papenburg, Germany.

Though not much detail has been given about any of the three new ships, the line says that they will be 140,000 gross tons, which is slightly larger than the 130,000 gross tons of Dream and Fantasy, but will have the same number of staterooms: 1,250.

The only image of the new ship design has shown a similar look and design to the rest of the fleet, but with its own unique water feature that’s different from the AquaDuck on Dream and Fantasy or

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