Just as first-half
2016 data reports a surge in Cayman Islands cruise ship
arrivals, the Caribbean island’s government this week took a
significant step in its multi-million dollar plan to construct a
modern cruise pier and terminal.
The government’s Central Tenders Committee, which is overseeing
the earlier approved cruise pier project, announced Wednesday it
has hired international engineering firm
Royal Haskoning DHV
to provide consultant services for the project, planned for
the harbor of George Town, Grand Cayman, the nation’s capital
city.
The Dutch engineering firm “will assist with determining the
cost of the piers to achieve the least possible environmental
impact,” according to a Ministry of Tourism & Transport
statement issued Thursday.
The government recently revised its original pier proposals
following the October green-lighting of the project. The plan
now calls for building the piers in deeper water, which
officials say would require less dredging and reduce the
project’s impact on the environment.
“The next stage in the process is to determine the performance
standards and specifications of construction,” the statement
adds. “The design works to be completed will better inform the
costs of the project and this is expected to be known early in
the fourth quarter of the year.”
The
project had been estimated to cost $150 million, but in a
briefing with local media, Moses Kirkconnell,
(Image Left) the Cayman Islands’ tourism
minister, said the projected price tag will likely range between
$150 and $190 million. He said the government is working with
major cruise lines to design a “financial model” for the project
and says discussions with cruise operators have been “very
positive.”
“Once the civil engineering design works are completed and the
detailed estimated cost to construct the piers is known,” said
Kirkconnell, “the Ministry will be in a better position to
negotiate the best possible financing model with cruise lines.”
He added, “Our goal is to arrive at a formula in partnership
with cruise lines that will not only fund construction of the
piers, but will ensure that they are owned by the people of the
Cayman Islands.”
The latest developments come as Cayman Islands cruise ship
traffic continues its explosive growth of recent years. The
country hosted 973,305 cruise ship visitors in the first six
months of 2016, a 60,000-passenger increase over the same period
in 2015.
Last year the Cayman Islands was one of only seven Caribbean
nations to host more than one million cruise ship visitors
despite being the only country among the group to lack a modern
cruise pier and port facility.
Kirkconnell also noted Cayman Islands air arrivals fell slightly
in the first six months of 2016 compared to 2015, during which
the destination posted record airline visitor arrivals. In all
210,490 visitors arrived in Cayman by air in the first six
months of 2016, compared with 213,493 visitors during the same
period in 2015.
The U.S. remains the Cayman Islands’ chief source market,
accounting for 80.1 percent of arrivals, followed by Europe at
6.93 percent and Canada at 6.69 percent.
Tourism officials at the gathering cited Zika virus fears,
Canada’s struggling economy, terrorist events in Europe and
Grand Cayman’s constrained hotel capacity as potential reasons
behind the 1.41 percent first-half drop. The Zika virus remains
a concern Cayman tourism officials are seeking to mitigate.
“We know that we are very attractive to the couples market,”
said Rosa Harris, director of tourism, in a Cayman News Service
report. “And for those that are in the phase of their lives that
are having families, [Zika] directly impacts that group.”
Still Kirkconnell noted Cayman Islands Department of Tourism
research found average daily room rate data from leading hotels
suggest the fewer visitors were collectively spending more money
than last year.
Kirkconnell is “optimistic” about the current tourism season and
said the November opening of the Kimpton Seafire Resort would
boost overnight, land-based arrivals.
At the briefing, Kirkconnell added that the government’s
expansion of Owen Roberts International Airport expansion
project remains “on budget and on schedule,” with the project in
the $42.5 million second phase, which includes renovation and
expansion of the arrival area, departure lounge, and check-in
lobby.
The project is slated for
completion in 2018.
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