Tourism & Cruises

Carnival, MSC, Norwegian, Disney extend cruise cancellations amid COVID-19 pandemic

Carnival Cruise Line, MSC Cruises, Norwegian Cruise Line and Disney Cruise Line all said Monday they would cancel additional cruises due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Carnival is canceling cruises through May 11, MSC through May 29, Norwegian through May 10 and Disney through April 28.

Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. previously announced it was extending its suspension across all of its cruise lines through May 11, and through June 30 for cruises in Alaska, Canada and New England.

All major cruise companies agreed to suspend new cruises on March 13 for at least 30 days in response to the pandemic. The move followed a warning against cruising issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention because of the increased risk of coronavirus infection on ships.

Most cruise ships are waiting at ports around the world, frequently going out to sea to exercise necessary systems and dump waste. Cruise companies say they are working to get crew members home who are not required for the essential operations of the ship, a task that has become increasingly difficult as travel restrictions tighten.

Some cruise ships, like Holland America Line’s Zaandam, owned by Carnival Corporation, are still scrambling to find a port that will allow them to unload passengers, some of them sick.

Cruise stocks fell again Monday, while the overall markets rose. Carnival Corporation shares closed at $12.80, down 11.17%, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. shares closed at $29.77, down 13.71%, and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings shares closed at $10.68, down 11.15%. The S&P 500 gained 3.35% and the Nasdaq gained 3.62%.

This story was originally published March 30, 2020 at 11:47 AM.

Taylor Dolven
Miami Herald
Taylor Dolven is a business journalist who has covered the tourism industry at the Miami Herald since 2018. Her reporting has uncovered environmental violations of cruise companies, the impact of vacation rentals on affordable housing supply, safety concerns among pilots at MIA’s largest cargo airline and the hotel industry’s efforts to delay a law meant to protect workers from sexual harassment.
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