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Marseille swings to growth with 1.7m cruisers forecast in 2018Marseille swings to growth with 1.7m cruisers forecast in 2018

If 2017, with 1,487,313 passengers, showed a dip (7%) compared to 2016, significant growth (13.3%) is projected to resume this year for France’s leading cruise port, Jean-François Suhas, president of the Club de la Croisière Marseille Provence, said during the recent 18th edition of the trade event Top Cruise.

Michèle Valandina, French correspondent

April 1, 2018

1 Min Read
Credit: Seatrade Cruise News

Some 88 ships, representing 31 cruise lnies, will make a total of 513 calls, up from 444 in 2017. Transit passengers should number 1,320,000, and 430,000 people are projected to use MedCruise member port Marseille to embark or disembark their cruise.

Costa and MSC most frequent callers

The main lines will be Costa and MSC Cruises, for a total of 315 departures operated by 10 ships for each company.

Seven new ships will be welcomed in Marseille: Symphony of the Seas (Royal Caribbean), Koningsdam (Holland America), Carnival Horizon, Seabourn Ovation, MSC Seaview, Le Champlain and Le Lapérouse (Ponant). The cruise market is also reinforced with calls from Disney, Viking, Regent Seven Seas, Oceania Cruises, Seabourn, Windstar and Azamara Club Cruises. German companies TUI Cruises and AIDA Cruises will position their ships on a regular basis, too.

In 2017, the region offered 150 shore excursions or pre-/post-cruise stays. Most prized were Marseille, Cassis, Alpilles and Lubéron, Saint-Rémy de Provence, Aix-en-Provence, Arles, Les Baux de Provence, Avignon, Le Castelet and Bandol.

No. 4 among Mediterranean cruise ports

According to MedCruise 2017 traffic statistics, Marseille gained one position in the cruise ports ranking and is fourth behind Barcelona (2.7m passengers), Civitavecchia (2.2m) and the Balearic Islands (2.1m).

The French port targets 2m cruisers by 2020.

About the Author

Michèle Valandina

French correspondent

A graduate from Lyon University, where she specialised in foreign languages and American literature, Michèle worked as an interpreter/translator (English, German and Italian) for major international events before entering the diplomatic world for a few years. As a Paris-based freelance travel and lifestyle writer, she has been a contributor to a host of publications and has long specialised in two sectors: cruising and wellness. Her features have appeared in, among others, Le Monde, Le Figaro, Le Figaro Magazine, Les Echos Week-end and periodicals dedicated to the MICE sector. She has also featured on radio and TV travel programmes and, since 1992, has been the author of the only French cruise guide, Croisières Passion.

 

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