Over a year after initially suspending sailings due to coronavirus and several push backs by its parent company Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, the world’s third-largest cruise operator has announced return to seas with voyages to Europe and The Caribbean set as of July 25, 2020.
The Cruise Line will restart operations at a reduced capacity with Norwegian Jade, Joy and Gem as the first of its 17-ship fleet to welcome guests back on board.
Travelers who couldn’t wait to get back on a cruise ship after the industry paused all new cruises in mid-March 2020, will now have the opportunity to spend the summer exploring ancient ruins and sunny beaches with all new seven-day cruises to the Greek Isles on Norwegian Jade from Athens (Piraeus) beginning July 25, 2021.
They can also island hop with week-long Caribbean itineraries available from Montego Bay, Jamaica as of August 7, 2021 on Norwegian Joy or from Punta Cana (La Romana), Dominican Republic on Norwegian Gem beginning August 15, 2021.
“Over a year after we initially suspended sailings, the time has finally come when we can provide our loyal guests with the news of our great cruise comeback,” says Norwegian Cruise Line’s CEO Harry Sommer.
The cruise line, he adds, has been working diligently towards our resumption of operations, focusing on the guest experience with health and safety at the forefront.
“The growing availability of the COVID-19 vaccine has been a game changer. The vaccine, combined with our science-backed health and safety protocols, will help us provide our guests with what we believe will be the healthiest and safest vacation at sea.”
All guests sailing aboard cruises with embarkation dates through October 31, 2021 will be required to be fully vaccinated and tested prior to boarding our ships.
“Given the ever-evolving nature of the pandemic, the accelerating rollout of the vaccine, and the speed of scientific learnings, it is premature to make decisions about our health and safety protocols for cruises with embarkation dates beginning November 1, 2021. We will continue to evaluate our health and safety protocols and rely on science and our expert council as we make decisions and evolve our policies and procedures.”
While the Cruise Line already had robust health and safety protocols in place, it has spent the past year further developing and refining those protocols, using the latest scientific findings and expert advice.
Is it safe to sail – Norwegian Cruise’s Covid-19 safety measures
Yesterday, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings launched its SailSAFE Health and Safety program, which is founded on three pillars:
- Safety for guests and crew with vaccination requirements, universal COVID-19 testing and enhanced health screening protocols
- Safety aboard with medical-grade air filtration, increased sanitation measures and enhanced medical resources, and
- Safety ashore through the collaboration with land-based tour operator partners to extend health and safety measures to each destination.
As protocols evolve and additional information becomes available, updates will be published at www.ncl.com/sail-safe.
The Company also announced its SailSAFE Global Health and Wellness Council (“the Council”), led by Chairman Dr Scott Gottlieb, former Commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) and Co-Chair of the Healthy Sail Panel.
The Council’s work will complement the Healthy Sail Panel initiative and will focus on the implementation, compliance with and continuous improvement of health and safety protocols across the Company’s operations. Additional information is available here.