Carnival Cruise Lines - Port in Maimon

HarpB

Member
Aug 31, 2012
69
17
18
I would tend beleive the actual spend is lower. I work for a competitor and $100 reported spend on tour of course is gross. $1000 spent in a shop is also gross minus percentage minus an annual contract bill. Ships normally pay aport tax to the gov't. $xx.xx per person which could equate to $20-30k. Also other services are handled through the port agent which of course are paid. Extra veggies, fruit, beer etc. Carnival although is very efficient in storea in home ports. Read their cost per passenger in annual reports. The question on owning a pier would be no in evry port I have ever been too that means over 1000. Carnival partnered with the Dominican National Government and local/regional entities. They obtain the rights/lease rights very cheap for a lot of years then develop. Does the port put some to work certainly. Is it aboom for a few sure. However most profit returns to the ship. There is an environmental impact also as discussed many threads ago. Does the postive more people working outweigh the negative only time will tell. If POP is further developed 6-7 ships a day in the winter it has great impact. Less than 100 visits a year still not full time work for many and of course less in the summer aince the ships go to Europe and Alaska.
 

AlterEgo

Administrator
Staff member
Jan 9, 2009
24,218
7,831
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South Coast
Today's DR1 News:

Puerto Plata sees 168,000 tourists in 8 months

In an announcement made yesterday, Wednesday 1 June 2016, Carnival Cruise Lines said that over the last eight months a total of 74 cruise ships with 168,000 tourists have arrived at the Amber Cove Port in Puerto Plata. According to Carnival, 24 ships have docked at Amber Cove since October 2015.

The cruise ship company says that 66% of visitors take tours in Puerto Plata and surrounding areas to visit historical, environmental and cultural sites. The most popular areas include the beaches, the cable car, the Malecon seafront avenue and the neighboring towns of Sosua and Cabarete.

The company says that between three and four ships arrive in Puerto Plata every week carrying thousands of tourists who use the Dominican Republic as their principal vacation destination. The information also confirms that 80% of visitors are from the United States and 20% are from other countries, mostly in Europe.
 

monfongo

Bronze
Feb 10, 2005
1,275
212
63
the cruise ships have had a positive impact on pto pta I've been here a long time and I've never seen pop look this good, why all the negatism .some of you people could find fault in a free lunch.
 

the gorgon

Platinum
Sep 16, 2010
33,996
83
0
the cruise ships have had a positive impact on pto pta I've been here a long time and I've never seen pop look this good, why all the negatism .some of you people could find fault in a free lunch.

unlike you, i am a numbers guy. forgive me, but it is my academic training. when someone makes an assertion like that, i want to see figures.

the fact that POP is looking better does not mean that the ships have had any kind of meaningful impact. if people believe that they are going to benefit, and borrow money to make improvements, then of course things will look better.

so, give us your figures, while i eat my free lunch.
 

Tamborista

hasta la tambora
Apr 4, 2005
11,745
1,344
113
Why not join 'em if you can't fight 'em?

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ohmmmm

Bronze
Jun 11, 2010
619
36
48
I was in Maimon having some seafood for lunch while a cruise boat was in port. I walked around looking at all the restaurants. I think I saw two couples that might have been tourists from the cruise boat eating at one of the restaurants. I then went to the Malicon to the restaurants by the fort for a drink and did not see any cruise boat tourists there. Could have missed them...but I don't think there is much of a direct impact on the area from cruise boat tourists.... When you consider that tourism is down overall the past years in the area, any benefit other than the tax revenue to the government from the cruise port is minimal. There has been upgrades to some of the areas in Puerto Plata, but I must say the construction of road and other so called tourist improvements still seems incomplete and not worthy of attracting any tourists.
 
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windeguy

Platinum
Jul 10, 2004
44,742
7,305
113
Can you fathom this? From the feel good tours.

?Life begins at the end of your comfort zone,? said Francisco, a Fathom Travel impact facilitator. Gone is the gambling casino, the second rate Las Vegas stage shows and the six hours in port so one can check off their bucket list. What stays on Fathom Travel?s 750 passenger M/V Adonia during its week long cruise to Puerto Plata is fine dining, elegant appointments, friendly crew and excellent musical entertainment. What?s new is the opportunity to learn from a variety of entrepreneurial community groups in the Dominican Republic already pulling themselves into the 21st century.

Learning from and assisting RePapel will be the first in a series of articles on this new voluntourism niche. A cynic may scoff at a group of affluent cruise passengers doing good deeds, other than buying another set of flamingo imprinted coasters and escaping to the luxury of their ship. Yet on this week long cruise with three days in Puerto Plata the operative words are cumulative impact.

The RePapel cooperative was founded in 1998 in the Dominican Republic to recycle paper, give women an income and help families stay together. Sounds lofty but it works.



Sitting in a non air conditioned room in high heat and humidity tearing paper into small pieces by hand is not an easy first impression on an outsider that this is the path to entering the 21st century. Why doesn?t RePapel simply buy an inexpensive shredding machine? Yet when a power outage cuts the single fan that was stirring the languid air the first reality in a long road to understanding the daily challenges of life for the average resident in Puerto Plata begins to dawn. Outages caused by the antiquated city power plant are frequent.

The Dominican Republic?s new progressive government has plans to replace the power plant when that item on the long list of national improvements is reached. In the meantime, tearing paper by hand while enjoying conversation with convivial people suddenly feels as enjoyable to this chef as kneading bread dough.
http://www.examiner.com/list/fathom-travel-is-rewriting-the-playbook-on-cruising