Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts

Drama surrounds the decision to build a cruise berthing facility in the Cayman Islands. After two decades waiting in the wings, the berthing is the most extensive infrastructure plan and the most divisive project Cayman has ever considered. Cruise passengers must wait for their ship to anchor offsho...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laura Panadès-Estruch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Antilles 2020-12-01
Series:Études Caribéennes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/etudescaribeennes/19612
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spelling doaj-738180d1b0dc44b4930c276f9d577eda2021-04-08T14:48:34ZengUniversité des AntillesÉtudes Caribéennes1779-09801961-859X2020-12-014710.4000/etudescaribeennes.19612Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three ActsLaura Panadès-EstruchDrama surrounds the decision to build a cruise berthing facility in the Cayman Islands. After two decades waiting in the wings, the berthing is the most extensive infrastructure plan and the most divisive project Cayman has ever considered. Cruise passengers must wait for their ship to anchor offshore and board a tender to carry them to the port. The Government intended to improve this situation by building a cruise berthing alongside a total redevelopment of its cargo port through a contractual public-private partnership. The project was awarded to a consortium led by Carnival and Royal Caribbean, but various decisions have been kicked back until after the May 2021 elections. However, has the ship now sailed? This article’s goal is to provide a way forward to overcome the current deadlock. The article is structured in three main sections: a general section on cruise ship tourism in Cayman to put this case study in context; the second section is a critical assessment of the cruise berthing’s timeline and milestones; and the third section assesses its impact on the host community. Desk-based research blending international and local bibliography provides a uniquely local perspective.http://journals.openedition.org/etudescaribeennes/19612Berthingcruise linereferendumenvironmenteconomicsConstitution
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Panadès-Estruch
spellingShingle Laura Panadès-Estruch
Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
Études Caribéennes
Berthing
cruise line
referendum
environment
economics
Constitution
author_facet Laura Panadès-Estruch
author_sort Laura Panadès-Estruch
title Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
title_short Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
title_full Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
title_fullStr Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
title_full_unstemmed Building Cruise Berthing Facilities in the Cayman Islands: an Unfinished Drama in Three Acts
title_sort building cruise berthing facilities in the cayman islands: an unfinished drama in three acts
publisher Université des Antilles
series Études Caribéennes
issn 1779-0980
1961-859X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Drama surrounds the decision to build a cruise berthing facility in the Cayman Islands. After two decades waiting in the wings, the berthing is the most extensive infrastructure plan and the most divisive project Cayman has ever considered. Cruise passengers must wait for their ship to anchor offshore and board a tender to carry them to the port. The Government intended to improve this situation by building a cruise berthing alongside a total redevelopment of its cargo port through a contractual public-private partnership. The project was awarded to a consortium led by Carnival and Royal Caribbean, but various decisions have been kicked back until after the May 2021 elections. However, has the ship now sailed? This article’s goal is to provide a way forward to overcome the current deadlock. The article is structured in three main sections: a general section on cruise ship tourism in Cayman to put this case study in context; the second section is a critical assessment of the cruise berthing’s timeline and milestones; and the third section assesses its impact on the host community. Desk-based research blending international and local bibliography provides a uniquely local perspective.
topic Berthing
cruise line
referendum
environment
economics
Constitution
url http://journals.openedition.org/etudescaribeennes/19612
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