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Two large cruise ships in Dockyard

The Queen Victoria cruise ship (File photograph)

Bermuda’s first two cruise ships of 2017 arrived this morning in the West End: the Oriana and Queen Victoria.

According to a press release from the Bermuda Government, it is “possibly the first time” two very large, Bermuda-registered cruise ships have been in a local port at the same time.

Senator Michael Fahy will mark the beginning of the cruise year in the West End, with surveyors from the new Bermuda quango, Bermuda Shipping and Maritime Authority, conducting a flag state inspection on the P&O Line’s Oriana, during its only visit of the year. The Cunard Line’s Queen Victoria is on the first of its two visits for the year.

Mr Fahy, the tourism minister, stated: “Ship visits in January are rare. These are the only two for the month with Queen Victoria at Heritage Wharf and Oriana at King’s Wharf.

“The total number of cruise ship passengers was up by more than 7 per cent in the first 11 months of 2016 and there is clear evidence that it is a continuing trend.

“In the year to the end of November, nearly 400,000 visitors experienced a Bermuda vacation aboard ships operated by our cruise ship partners.”

The minister was expected to lead a small delegation on board the Oriana to meet with the ship’s senior staff this afternoon.

Both ships are members of the Carnival UK Group and will today have a combined guest list of more than 3,600 vacationers aboard, together with more than 1,700 crew members.

The Government’s Department of Maritime Administration was converted into a quango in October 2016, becoming the Bermuda Shipping and Maritime Authority. It oversees a shipping registry of vessels comprising approximately 12 million gross tons and seeks to further develop and grow the registry and its revenue.

The registry includes 29 passenger ships, 51 modern gas tankers, 20 oil tankers, 15 container ships, luxury yachts and other vessels totaling about 170 ships.

The Ministry of Tourism, Transport and Municipalities retains responsibilities for statutory functions, while a board of directors is responsible for operational functions.

Also Bermuda-registered are Queen Victoria’s Cunard Line sister ships, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary 2.