Pauline
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The Guardian - The world's largest cruise ship and its supersized pollution problem, by John Vidal, 21 May 2016
As Harmony of the Seas sets sail from Southampton docks on Sunday she will leave behind a trail of pollution – a toxic problem that is growing as the cruise industry and its ships get ever bigger
From the article: 'Daniel Rieger, a transport officer at German environment group Nabu, said: “Cruise companies create a picture of being a bright, clean and environmentally friendly tourism sector. But the opposite is true. One cruise ship emits as many air pollutants as five million cars going the same distance because these ships use heavy fuel that on land would have to be disposed of as hazardous waste.”'
Yes, here I am going on about cruise ships again. We just spent a week with friends who had done 3 back to back cruises (South America, Florida to Europe, Mediterranean) and were spending a week with us before doing a 4th cruise (Ireland and Iceland), so I heard plenty about how it is the ideal way to travel, how the ports they visit want the cruise ships because it is beneficial to the local economy, how environmentally friendly it all is, how well paid and well treated the staff are. I argued each point and hoped to show them the beauty of slow travel, but they left being very happy to get back on a cruise ship.
People on the cruise ship are not affected by the pollution because it spews away from the ship.
I find that I am now factoring in cruise ships to my trip planning. I used to worry about "tour bus towns" but now I look to see if cruise ships doc nearby and offer day trips to places I am going to. The Amalfi Coast, where we just spent two weeks, gets day trippers from cruise ships docking at Salerno and Naples. They are offered a bus tour along the Amalfi Coast, stopping in Amalfi. Tour buses are not allowed into Positano but they drive by and, I think, stop at a view point just outside of town. Sorrento was packed with day trippers. Lots of them at Pompeii too.
Maybe the answer is to go off season to cruise ship destination and in season to go inland.
The travel world is all getting a bit too crowded.
As Harmony of the Seas sets sail from Southampton docks on Sunday she will leave behind a trail of pollution – a toxic problem that is growing as the cruise industry and its ships get ever bigger
From the article: 'Daniel Rieger, a transport officer at German environment group Nabu, said: “Cruise companies create a picture of being a bright, clean and environmentally friendly tourism sector. But the opposite is true. One cruise ship emits as many air pollutants as five million cars going the same distance because these ships use heavy fuel that on land would have to be disposed of as hazardous waste.”'
Yes, here I am going on about cruise ships again. We just spent a week with friends who had done 3 back to back cruises (South America, Florida to Europe, Mediterranean) and were spending a week with us before doing a 4th cruise (Ireland and Iceland), so I heard plenty about how it is the ideal way to travel, how the ports they visit want the cruise ships because it is beneficial to the local economy, how environmentally friendly it all is, how well paid and well treated the staff are. I argued each point and hoped to show them the beauty of slow travel, but they left being very happy to get back on a cruise ship.
People on the cruise ship are not affected by the pollution because it spews away from the ship.
I find that I am now factoring in cruise ships to my trip planning. I used to worry about "tour bus towns" but now I look to see if cruise ships doc nearby and offer day trips to places I am going to. The Amalfi Coast, where we just spent two weeks, gets day trippers from cruise ships docking at Salerno and Naples. They are offered a bus tour along the Amalfi Coast, stopping in Amalfi. Tour buses are not allowed into Positano but they drive by and, I think, stop at a view point just outside of town. Sorrento was packed with day trippers. Lots of them at Pompeii too.
Maybe the answer is to go off season to cruise ship destination and in season to go inland.
The travel world is all getting a bit too crowded.