Carnival’s Costa Cruises to pull out Asia trips, including S’pore port stop, as China’s Covid-19 policy bites

Costa Cruises previously had port stops in China and Hong Kong as well as Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO

HONG KONG - Costa Cruises, a unit of cruising giant Carnival Corp that targets the nascent Chinese market, is cancelling all future Asia departures amid waning expectations that Beijing will ease its zero-tolerance Covid-19 policy and border restrictions any time soon.

Port stops in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Japan and South Korea will be cancelled as international cruises in those locations still have not resumed, the Italy-based company said in a statement, adding that it is reorganising its business in the region.

Costa Cruises said it is informing employees and local stakeholders in Asia affected by the reorganisation and cancellation of Asian cruises. In February, the company touted plans to resume cruising in the region this year.

The company’s website for the Asia market generated an error message this week. “After the pause imposed due to the pandemic, the resumption of international tourism across the whole region has been registering continuous delays, and we don’t know when and how international cruises will restart in the area,” the company said. “Given the continued uncertainty, we had to take this decision.”

Though Costa did not reference China, the company had big plans to tap consumers there and was the first cruise brand to enter the country in 2006. It built two massive ships exclusively for the market, but plans for a 2021 debut of the Costa Firenze in Asia never materialised, and the ship was redeployed to Europe as Chinese leaders adopted a strict Covid-19-zero policy to deal with the pandemic. China is widely expected by the industry to eventually become the largest cruise market in the world.

Hopes of China easing its pandemic restrictions dimmed after the leadership shuffle over the weekend at the once-in-five-years Communist Party Congress. President Xi Jinping gave no indication he is looking to depart from a pandemic approach that is leaving China increasingly isolated – with lockdowns, compulsory quarantine and restrictions on entering and leaving the nationstill very much in place.

Chinese tourism stocks, along with Asian equities, slumped on Monday, even after Bloomberg News reported last week that officials were looking at easing the mandatory quarantine policy for those coming into China.

China has allowed limited cruise operations domestically for mainland residents since the onset of Covid-19, with most taking place on inland rivers and along some local coastlines. It recently allowed a domestic operator to restart a cruise to the disputed Paracel Islands, which Vietnam also claims in the South China Sea.

Carnival the world’s largest cruise company, is a minority stakeholder in a joint venture with state-owned China State Shipbuildingand operated cruises to serve Chinese guests. The joint venture is unaffected by Costa’s news, a Carnival representative said. The two luxury liners the joint venture purchased from Costa to run its cruises have been out of service since the pandemic and are now anchored off Cypress.

Some of the earliest mass Covid-19 outbreaks occurred on cruise ships, leading to an effective global suspension of the industry. While cruises have started to return in other parts of the world – some still requiring vaccination and virus testing – Asia has been slower to dismantle pandemic barriers that helped much of the region avert the higher death tolls seen in places like the United States. BLOOMBERG

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