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Many major cruise lines are embracing the trend of going bigger, launching increasingly massive ships to attract travelers with more amenities, entertainment options, and space, reshaping the ...
Cruise lines are building bigger ships with more amenities to attract travelers. Not all cruise lines are increasing the size of their ships, with many opting to keep ships at 3,000 passengers or ...
When other cruise lines — most notably Royal Caribbean — are building larger and larger cruise ships, Disney will be making three of its future ships smaller than its recent ones.
The cruise industry is growing fast, with a future focused on bigger ships, small-ship luxury and more sustainable travel. Photo / Royal Caribbean What does the future of the cruise industry look ...
The average modern cruise ship takes about 250 tons or 80,000 gallons of fuel daily. But can you imagine a cruise ship capable of circling the globe fourteen times before it needed to top off? That… ...
Cruise ships are notorious greenhouse gas emitters, so Hurtigruten revealed an ambitious design for a zero-emissions cruise liner.
When other cruise lines ‒ most notably Royal Caribbean ‒ are building larger and larger cruise ships, Disney will be making three of its future ships smaller than its recent ones.
The thing is, making massive cruise ships float is a lot harder when taking gravity into consideration. If that's the case, then does that mean the future of cruises won't be in the sky after all?
Disney Cruise Line announced Friday that three of its future ships in its expansion to a fleet of 13 in the next seven years will be smaller than all but its original two vessels.
Cruise passengers are embarking on a hunger strike after their luxury vessel scrapped its voyage to Antarctica due to an engine malfunction and then refused to refund them in full.
Major cruise companies have a number of big ships on the way, but that doesn't mean the whole industry is scaling up.