Daily Archives: May 2, 2017

Pentagon wants offshore drilling ban maintained in eastern Gulf – The Hill

Posted: May 2, 2017 at 11:22 pm

The Pentagon wants to continue a ban on offshore drilling in the eastern Gulf of Mexico thats set to expire in five years.

A.M. Kurta, the acting under secretary of Defense for personnel and readiness, told a Florida lawmaker in a letter publicly released Monday that military training and related exercises in the eastern Gulf, which borders Florida, necessitate a continuation of Congresss ban on drilling.

The letter Kurta wrote to Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) adds a new wrinkle to the Trump administrations drive to dramatically increase offshore oil and natural gas drilling.

An ordersignedMonday by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke says the department will look at the entire Gulf of Mexico for potential drilling.

And the oil industry is gunning for the eastern Gulf,tellingreporters yesterday that drilling there could create thousands of new jobs and billions of dollars in new investment.

But the Pentagon is pushing back against drilling in the eastern Gulf, near Florida.

The moratorium ensures that these vital military readiness activities may be conducted without interference and is critical to their continuation, Kurta wrote to Gaetz in response to a letter inquiring about the drilling ban.

Emerging technologies such as hypersonics, autonomous systems, and advanced sub-surface systems will require enlarged testing and training footprints, and increased DoD reliance on the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Acts moratorium beyond 2022. The moratorium is essential for developing and sustaining our nations future combat capabilities.

The military uses the eastern Gulf as a training ground, the U.S. militarys largest training facility in the world. Floridas hosts numerous military bases, including a major Air Force base near Tampa and naval stations in Key West, Panama City and Pensacola.

For decades, the federal government has prevented drilling in the eastern Gulf, due mostly to the military needs. The ban was formalized in 2006, thanks to legislation sponsored by Sen. Bill NelsonBill NelsonOvernight Regulation: Senate confirms SEC pick | House GOP passes 'comp time' bill | Senate confirms Trump's SEC pick Pentagon wants offshore drilling ban maintained in eastern Gulf MORE (D-Fla.) and then-Sen. Mel Martnez (D-Fla.), but that expires in 2022.

Nelson, who staunchly defends the drilling ban against any policy that could even slightly threaten it, filed legislation earlier this year to extend the prohibition through 2027.

Trumps order specifically asks Interior to consult with the Pentagon as it formulates new drilling plans.

Read more:

Pentagon wants offshore drilling ban maintained in eastern Gulf - The Hill

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Pentagon wants offshore drilling ban maintained in eastern Gulf – The Hill

Scottish surfer rescued 13 miles offshore after holding on to his board for 32 hours – Los Angeles Times

Posted: at 11:22 pm

A surfer survived while holding on to his board some 32 hours after being swept out to sea from while attempting to surf along the west coast of Scotland, according to the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency.

Matthew Bryce, 22, of Glasgow was rescued by helicopter on Monday night and was recovering at a hospital in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Tuesday.

I am so grateful that I am now receiving treatment in hospital, Bryce said in a statement. "I cannot thank those enough who rescued and cared for me, they are all heroes."

Water temperatures dropped as low as 46 degrees while Bryce was at sea. He was conscious but suffering from hypothermia at the time of his rescue.

"He was kitted out with all the right clothing including a thick neoprene suit and this must have helped him to survive for so long at sea," said Dawn Petrie, a spokeswoman for the coast guard operations center in Belfast that coordinated the search.

Bryces family alerted authorities midday on Monday after he failed to return from Machrihanish beach, where he went to surf the previous morning.

"Hope was fading of finding the surfer safe and well after such a long period in the water, and with nightfall approaching we were gravely concerned," Petrie said.

But then the rescue crew spotted something in the water 13 miles offshore. Coast guard Capt. Andy Pilliner, pilot of helicopter, said they initially thought it was a buoy.

"We went around, dropped down the height a bit, came in and then that moment, when you go, 'Oh! it is actually a surfboard and there is actually someone on it waving,'" Pilliner said. "It's just a great feeling, it's just what you're hoping for, but daren't."

charles.schilken@latimes.com

Twitter: @chewkiii

ALSO

'Grab the surf leash!' Beachgoers frantically try to save woman attacked by shark at popular surf spot

Here's how hundreds of tons of plastic trash end up in Arctic Ocean

Huge arsenal seized from high-ranking Pasadena police officer's home, new records show

The rest is here:

Scottish surfer rescued 13 miles offshore after holding on to his board for 32 hours - Los Angeles Times

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Scottish surfer rescued 13 miles offshore after holding on to his board for 32 hours – Los Angeles Times

Offshore business for German company thrives during a bust – FuelFix (blog)

Posted: at 11:22 pm

As some exhibitors waited for oil and gas professionals to stop by their booths at the Offshore Technology Conference this week, one German company, ELA Container, found that it had all the business it wanted.

ELA Container, which designs and builds offshore living quarters, found that business has surged during the oil downturn, when offshore project managers have time to shop for smaller and cheaper living arrangements for offshore crews, said Katharina Pleus, a marketer for ELA.

The company made its OTC debut in 2016 when attendance suffered in the wake of plunging oil prices and returned this year, even as the industry struggles to recover. The company just opened a Houston branch, Pleus said.

This is the right time to step into the market, said Pleus. Last time was a bad year, but it was busy for us.

The companys exhibit at NRG Park featured two 20 foot by 8 foot living containers, stacked on top of each other. They look like standard shipping containers but are built to offshore requirements, reinforced with several millimeters of steel and fire resistant components. (The containers will withstand up to 60 minutes of flame and heat, Pleus said.)

A container with two beds, each in a separate room and joined by a bathroom, costs $90,000. A simple empty container costs around $15,000. They are cheaper, narrower and shorter than the typical containers made in the U.S., Pleus added.

Original post:

Offshore business for German company thrives during a bust - FuelFix (blog)

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Offshore business for German company thrives during a bust – FuelFix (blog)

Diamond Offshore’s Earnings Dive, but Investors Shouldn’t Fret … – Motley Fool

Posted: at 11:22 pm

While the oil price crash lasted from the middle of 2014 to early 2016, the market for offshore rigs started to decline well before that and is still on the downswing. In the fourth quarter of 2016, Diamond Offshore Drilling (NYSE:DO) was able to surprise investors a bit with a better-than-expected quarter. This time, though, results fell back in line with what we would expect from a company suffering through a more than three-year slump.

Despite this environment, Diamond's results weren't all that bad, really. Here's a look at how the company did this past quarter and what investors should make of Diamond's stock in the future.

Image source: Getty Images.

*IN MILLIONS, EXCEPT PER-SHARE DATA. DATA SOURCE: DIAMOND OFFSHORE EARNINGS RELEASE.

What has helped keep earnings afloat for many rig companies over the past year has been the ability to cut costs, especially with those related to rigs that are either warm stacked (idle but kept ready to go if a customer wants it quickly) or cold stacked (significant shutdown of equipment in anticipation of a long idle time). In many cases, costs for these stacked rigs were cut in half or more.

It seems, though, that rig companies have pulled all the levers they can on cutting costs as of late, because operating cost cuts today are no longer keeping up with declines in revenue. That's why we saw such a sharp drop in earnings for Diamond year over year. The decrease from the prior quarter isn't as concerning as it looks because Diamond realized a $0.29-per-share gain related to an early termination payment for one of its midwater floaters.

That said, investors shouldn't be too discouraged by these results. The company has been able to maintain profitability with less than 50% of its total fleet utilized. Also, Diamond has been able to maintain a 94.3% operational utilization rate for the quarter, which means that the rigs that are under contract aren't experiencing much downtime.

DATA SOURCE: DIAMOND OFFSHORE EARNINGS RELEASE. CHART BY AUTHOR.

It also is a good sign that Diamond has been able to find work for some of its rigs. Last quarter, two of its ultra-deepwater rigs started work on long-term contracts, and management was able to follow up this quarter with new contracts for two rigs. Its Ocean Monarch rig obtained a contract extension through the end of 2018, and Ocean Patriot will start a new two-year contract once its current contract is complete in the second quarter of 2018.

These contract awards touch on a theme that Diamond CEOMarc Edwards mentioned in the prior quarter's release. He said that it is going to be easier to market "hot" rigs -- those that haven't been stacked -- becausethey are ready to go on day one. This will play rather well into Diamond's hands over the long run as most of its newer assets are still hot while its older fleet consists of mostly the ones that were stacked.

About the shorter-term rig market, Edwards said:

We believe that it is still too early to call it bottom in deepwater utilization although we could be witnessing the first signs of a trough in falling rig demand. However, even when demand stabilizes, there will likely still be an oversupply in the sixth-generation asset class. At a major industry conference here in Houston during February, many of the operating companies who contract deepwater assets, however, have stated that deepwater can compete on a financial returns basis with shale on North American light tighter oil.

Diamond has done great work in managing its fleet both during the high point of the industry by not being overly exuberant with its expansion plan and during the crash by preserving capital and prioritizing its marketing. Today, a decent chunk of its most valuable assets are still on the water and getting new contracts as a result. At the same time, the company's balance sheet has held up remarkably well. With a half-dozen or so older rigs on the books that are less likely to get much work in the future, don't be surprised if the company scraps a few of its stacked rigs someday.

Overall, however, Diamond looks like the kind of company investors can get behind if they are looking to bet on the offshore oil and gas industry bouncing back over the next several years. Considering how cheap shares trade for today -- 0.5 times tangible book -- that seems like a solid thesis.

Tyler Crowe has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Visit link:

Diamond Offshore's Earnings Dive, but Investors Shouldn't Fret ... - Motley Fool

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Diamond Offshore’s Earnings Dive, but Investors Shouldn’t Fret … – Motley Fool

Offshore needs ‘sense of urgency,’ Chevron VP says – FuelFix (blog)

Posted: at 11:22 pm

An employee stands on the deck of a pilot boat in view of the Ocean Princess oil platform, operated by Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc., in the Port of Cromarty Firth in Cromarty, U.K., on Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2016. Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg

Deep-water oil production companies are trying to figure out how to work better together, produce projects more quickly and cut costs.

Operators have collaborated on research and development projects for years, Chevron vice president Roy Krzywosinski told attendees at the Offshore Technology Conference at NRG Park on Tuesday. But companies have often struggled to work together, bogging down on administrative nuts-and-bolts.

Now the collaborators have re-started an old agency to cut through the red tape and focus on projects. The group, called the DEEPSTAR Offshore Operators Committee, will be administered by an external party and focused on core R&D, Krzywosinski said.

RELATED: Offshores big tech idea? Simplify, standardize and lower costs

We need a sense of urgency, he said. Offshore drillers are in a race to make deep-water drilling competitive with the onshore U.S. shale revolution. Costs must come down, Krzywosinski said. Ultimate recovery must come up.

In the shale gas, look what theyre doing with their well programs. Theyre drilling so many wells, he said. And if operators can cut 15 minutes out of the drilling time for each well, that makes a real difference, Krzywosinski said. You bring a manufacturing mindset into that space.

But offshore collaboration wont work, he continued, if it takes the lions share of time figuring out how to collaborate.

The new DEEPSTAR committee, he said, will focus on R&D collaboration, cooperation with suppliers and standardization.

See the rest here:

Offshore needs 'sense of urgency,' Chevron VP says - FuelFix (blog)

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Offshore needs ‘sense of urgency,’ Chevron VP says – FuelFix (blog)

Malta PM calls snap election over offshore scandal – EUobserver

Posted: at 11:22 pm

Malta's prime minister Joseph Muscat has called a snap election for 3 June following allegations his wife owns an offshore firm in Panama.

The vote will take place during Malta's EU presidency, which ends on 30 June.

The Labour leader told a crowd in Valletta on Monday (1 May) that the accusations against him and his family were baseless.

"Everybody knows about the attacks made in the past few days on me and my family. I have nothing to fear because truth is on my side and I am clean," he said.

The scandal erupted after Maltese blogger Daphne Caruana Galizia claimed Muscat's wife Michelle held shares in Egrant Inc, a firm named in last year's massive data leak from Panama-based Mossack Fonseca law firm.

While it is not illegal to hold an offshore account, it can be used to hide assets from tax authorities.

Such revelations have already seen Iceland's prime minister resign from office.

Nationalist Party (PN) leader Simon Busuttil has said Muscat must also step down.

The leaked cache of papers did not show the owners of Egrant, but instead revealed links to a Malta-based auditing firm Nexia BT.

An inquiry in Malta has since been launched to find evidence tying Egrant with the prime minister and his wife.

Muscat told Maltese media that he would step down from office if the inquiry revealed any ties.

"I am confident the inquiry will not find anything, because I know there is nothing to find," he said.

Muscat's chief of staff Keith Schembri and Labour minister Konrad Mizzi held shares in other firms also managed by Mossack Fonseca through Nexia BT.

Both Schembri and Mizzi had set up the secret companies after they took office in March 2013. The two at the time had also been negotiating an energy deal with Azerbaijan.

Galizia in her blog said large sums of money had been moved between bank accounts in Azerbaijan and accounts held by Egrant Inc. and the offshore firms belonging to Schembri and Mizzi.

The shady dealings sparked large demonstrations in Malta last week with thousands reportedly taking to the streets against corruption.

A delegation of MEPs from the parliament's Panama tax inquiry committee had visited Malta earlier this year.

Schembri, along with the Nexia BT accountants who set up the offshore accounts, refused to meet them.

Far-left Portuguese MEP Miguel Viegas, who was among the deputies in the delegation, said at the time that the Panama revelations had raised serious questions about ties between Malta's political class and money-laundering.

"Members of both the conservatives and the social democrats in Malta have serious questions to answer relating to their involvement in money-laundering and tax evasion as exposed in the Panama Papers," he said.

Original post:

Malta PM calls snap election over offshore scandal - EUobserver

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Malta PM calls snap election over offshore scandal – EUobserver

Baker Hughes taking shale techniques offshore – Houston Chronicle

Posted: at 11:22 pm

Photo: Michael Ciaglo, Staff

Jim Sessions, Baker Hughes vice president for completions, introduces the company's deep-water multistage fracturing service, DeepFrac, on Monday at the Offshore Technology Conference.

Jim Sessions, Baker Hughes vice president for completions, introduces the company's deep-water multistage fracturing service, DeepFrac, on Monday at the Offshore Technology Conference.

Baker Hughes taking shale techniques offshore

Baker Hughes is moving the process that launched the shale revolution to the deep ocean waters with its new "DeepFrac" technology.

The hydraulic fracturing product unveiled Monday at the Offshore Technology Conference at NRG Park is intended to produce more oil in increasingly concentrated areas while using less time and money.

Although oil companies have used variations of fracking for offshore production for several years, Baker Hughes is following the onshore trend of using more and more frac jobs with less spacing in between. Fracking and horizontal drilling combined to spur the onshore oil and gas boom of the last 10 years or so.

While the new DeepFrac technology won't suddenly make all of the struggling offshore sector profitable again, said Jim Sessions, Baker Hughes vice president for completions, it could increase the efficiency of production and lower costs. "It's a significant step along the way," he said.

Fracking is a laborious, multistep process that involves blasting sand or small metallic balls along with water and chemicals to unlock oil and gas. DeepFrac eliminates many of those steps, Sessions said. It uses movable tube-shaped sleevesto control the flow of oil, eliminating the need for some extra piping and cementing in wells.

To read this article in one of Houston's most-spoken languages, click on the button below.

Sessions described the technology as a "ball-activated DeepFrac sleeve." Baker Hughes said the device will provide "unprecedented efficiency gains."

DeepFrac will allow companies to frac up to 20 stages - up from just five, in some cases - and cut certain well completion steps from weeks to days, the company said. A stage is a slightly different location that is fracked in a well, and increasing the number of areas for fracking can increase production.

Sessions said a recent 15-stage frac job completed in 11 days in the Gulf of Mexico saved $40 million and about 25 days versus a conventional three-stage process.

There are pros and cons to each approach, said Andrew Hasemann, a sales manager at rival Halliburton.

"We can't do as many stages but theirs are smaller," Hasemann said.

Halliburton routinely performs five-stage frac jobs in deepwater environments. It may take a little longer with fewer stages, but Halliburton can produce more oil and gas overall with more control in more targeted areas, Hasemann said.

See the original post here:

Baker Hughes taking shale techniques offshore - Houston Chronicle

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Baker Hughes taking shale techniques offshore – Houston Chronicle

To help stop illegal fishing, ban practice of transshipment on high … – Mongabay.com

Posted: at 11:21 pm

New research concludes that a total ban on the practice of transshipment on the high seas is necessary to help stop illegal fishing and reduce the human trafficking and labor rights abuses that often accompany unlawful fishing activities.

Transshipping enables fishing vessels to remain at sea for extended periods of time, Washington D.C.-based oceans conservancy NGO Oceana explains. Fishing vessels and refrigerated cargo vessels rendezvous at sea in order to transfer seafood, fuel or supplies. While this transshipping practice can be legal in many cases, it also can facilitate the laundering of illegally caught fish, especially on the high seas and in waters surrounding developing and small island nations with insufficient resources to police their waters.

As detailed in a report released last month, Oceana found that close to 40 percent of suspected instances of transshipping occur on the high seas areas outside of any national jurisdiction, which make up about two-thirds of Earths oceans. Russias Sea of Okhotsk, the high-seas regions of the Barents Sea, the national waters of Guinea-Bissau, and just outside the national waters of Argentina and Peru are reportedly the worlds chief transshipping hotspots.

Oceanas report was based on an analysis of data collected by West Virginia-based environmental monitoring NGO SkyTruth and Global Fishing Watch, a partnership between Google, Oceana, and SkyTruth, which documented more than 5,000 likely cases of illegal transshipment and over 86,000 potential cases between 2012 and 2016.

In a paper published in the journal Marine Policy last month, a team of researchers make the case that a global ban on the practice of transshipment on the high seas is necessary in order to curb illegal fishing and human rights abuses in the global fishing industry.

This practice often occurs on the high seas and beyond the reach of any nations jurisdiction, allowing ships fishing illegally to evade most monitoring and enforcement measures, offload their cargo, and resume fishing without returning to port, Jennifer Jacquet, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at New York University (NYU) and a co-author of the paper, said in a statement.

Chris Ewell, the papers lead author, added: More significantly, transshipment at-sea can facilitate trafficking and exploitation of workers who are trapped and abused on fishing vessels because there is simply no authority present to protect those being exploited. Ewell was an undergraduate student at NYU at the time of the study.

Coastal waters are becoming increasingly overexploited, the researchers note in the paper, causing fishing vessels to travel further from shore in search of fish. Traveling to distant waters on the high seas is more expensive, of course, driving the fishing industry to seek government-sponsored subsidies, especially fuel subsidies, as well as cost-cutting measures like the use of forced labor and transshipments, which the industry defends on economic grounds, arguing that it improves efficiency by allowing a single cargo vessel to bring the catches of several fishing vessels to port and leads to better fuel efficiency.

Ewell and team looked at transshipment regulations adopted by 17 Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs), the international bodies responsible for governing fisheries on the high seas, in order to determine how strictly regulated the practice is around the globe.

They found that while the majority of RFMOs have increasingly strengthened transshipment-at-sea regulations since the late 1990s, just five had mandated even a partial ban as of 2015, the year of study. Only one RFMO, the South East Atlantic Fisheries Organization, has adopted a total ban on transshipment.

Yet, according to Ewell and co-authors, banning the practice altogether is crucial if were to rein in illegal fishing, estimated to cause somewhere between $10 billion and $23.5 billion in annual global losses, and ensure the future sustainability of fisheries.

A global ban would also help cut down on the human trafficking, forced labor, and other human rights abuses that have become unsettlingly common within the fishing industry, Ewell and co-authors write. Transshipment helps make these human rights abuses possible because it allows fishing vessels to stay out to sea and thereby avoid shore-based regulatory and law enforcement agents.

Workers are largely recruited by manning agencies in developing countries, where they are made false promises of compensation, asked to pay agency fees later used as justification for indentured servitude, robbed of their documents, and sold into conditions that constitute slavery, the researchers write. These fishermen are drastically underpaid or unpaid, and often held captive at sea for several years as fishing vessels receive supplies of food and fuel via transshipments at-sea. Transshipments at-sea have also been linked to other forms of organized crime such as drug, weapon, and other wildlife trafficking.

Ewel and his co-authors argue that A total ban on transshipment at-sea on the high seas would support the ability of oversight and enforcement agencies to detect and prevent illegal fishing and also likely reduce human trafficking and forced labor on the high seas.

CITATION

Follow Mike Gaworecki on Twitter: @mikeg2001

FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

Article published by Mike Gaworecki on 2017-05-01.

Read more:

To help stop illegal fishing, ban practice of transshipment on high ... - Mongabay.com

Posted in High Seas | Comments Off on To help stop illegal fishing, ban practice of transshipment on high … – Mongabay.com

5 private islands you can rent on Airbnb – The Week Magazine

Posted: at 11:20 pm

Sign Up for

Our free email newsletters

For those who really, really, really want to get away from it all (and from everyone), renting your own private island makes for an ideal vacation. While it used to be that you had to be a mogul to do such a thing, nowadays you'll find many of these getaways cost roughly the same as a night at a mid- to high-end hotel. From the shores of Colombia to British Columbia, these Airbnb islands prove life's greatest luxuries are indeed peace and quiet.

1. The Ark

Cartagena, Bolvar, Colombia, $572 a night

White-sand beaches and palm trees surround this classic Caribbean four-bedroom "cottage," which is perched on an island just off the Colombian isle of Tintipn. But this is a cottage the way Newport, Rhode Island, mansions are cottages: It's an adorable understatement. The 10,000-square-foot villa houses up to 25 people, if that's your idea of a getaway. The biggest draw is the authentic Caribbean cuisine served up by The Ark's head cook, Maria Candela. Dine on traditional panfried fish and coconut rice, perhaps in the comfort of one of the many hammocks in the 700-square-foot outdoor great room.

2. Dogatraz Island

Hinesburg, Vermont, $245 a night

If your ideal traveling companion happens to be of the four-legged variety, you'll love this appropriately named dog-friendly island in the middle of Lake Iroquois. There's a main cottage with a screened-in porch for lazy summer nights, plus places to camp if you prefer to sleep right under the stars. Hang out by the fire pit, take a swim or just enjoy the classic New England scenery.

3. AshKay Island

Manchester, Michigan, $700 a night

If a private island somehow doesn't offer enough privacy, how about one that comes with a private 156-acre lake? Though you'll have to pay a bit more for such a luxury, the ability to vacation and skinny-dip like no one's watching might be worth it. Swim and fish your heart out or just enjoy the simple pleasure of having a beach (and perfect view) all to yourself.

4. Out There

Sunshine Coast, British Columbia, Canada, $333 a night

If you've logged too many hours on emails to count, book this island right now. This private island eco-retreat promises a break from notifications against the backdrop of the stunning Sunshine Coast of British Columbia (which hasn't been fully discovered as a vacation destination yet). You've got your choice of a yurt or tent-cabin, and meals are included in the price of your stay.

5. Crescent Island

Sanibel, Florida, $775 a night

You're never truly alone when you vacation in Florida even its gorgeous coastline becomes sullied by throngs of vacationers. That's especially the case for the picture-perfect beaches on Sanibel Island; that is, unless you opt for a private island off Sanibel instead. You can rent a boat to get to and from civilization, like restaurants and shops, then retire to a secluded paradise that remains confidently free of other people's selfie sticks. Wanna share? The home sleeps up to 10.

Tasting Table is a website and newsletter for culinary enthusiasts. We eat high and low to bring you discerning dining, recipe, culinary events, gift guides, and food travel advice you can trust along with news you can use from the world of food and drink.

Let's cook something together. Let's order another round. Let's live deliciously.

Pull up a seat and join us at TastingTable.com

Continue reading here:

5 private islands you can rent on Airbnb - The Week Magazine

Posted in Private Islands | Comments Off on 5 private islands you can rent on Airbnb – The Week Magazine

Disney Offering Cruises That Spend 2 Days at Their Private Island – Cruise Fever

Posted: at 11:20 pm

Share on Facebook Share

403

Share on Google Plus Share

0

Share on Pinterest Share

0

Share on LinkedIn Share

0

Disney Cruise Line is offering nine cruises this summer that stop at their private island in the Bahamas, Castaway Cay, for two days during each cruise.

These special nine cruises on Disney Dream will each be four or five days in length with the first one scheduled to depart Port Canaveral onJune 2, 2017. Each cruise willspend one day in Castaway Cay and Nassau, before returning to Castaway Cay for the 3rd day. The five day cruises will have a sea day after the threedays in port.

Castaway Cay remains one of the most popular private islands among all islands owned by a cruise line. The island has a pier for docking so there is no need for tendering. Castaway Cay offers multiple beaches including one reserved only for adults (Serenity Bay).

Disney Dream is a 129,690 gross ton cruise ship that debuted in January 2011. The 4,000 passenger cruise ship sails year round from Port Canaveral to the Bahamas and is the 3rd ship built by Disney Cruise Line.

See more here:

Disney Offering Cruises That Spend 2 Days at Their Private Island - Cruise Fever

Posted in Private Islands | Comments Off on Disney Offering Cruises That Spend 2 Days at Their Private Island – Cruise Fever