It seems that with no end in sight, this would be a good time to divert some ships that are less than full and start some transatlantic crossings. It sure would be better than sitting in an airport waiting for the sky to clear.
Well, Cunard already has weekly transatlantics back and forth and they run full at the best of times. Some of the others are repositioning ships to the med at this time of year (well soon) anyways...and they likely have those itineraries sold also. Other ships are probably pretty full elsewhere so what would they do with those passengers? The only time a ship is not being used is when it is in drydock so where would they get empty vessels? I would think planning something like this would take a little time to get into placeI wouldn't be surprised if some aren't thinking on it mind you.
It is a good idea ..
Now some countries are closing their air space until Tuesday and there is another Icelandic volcano that may erupt. They may have time to actually build more cruise ships before all of this settles down.Now there are 6 million passengers stranded....some where. If they are lucky, they are stranded at home.
What they need to build are more ocean liners. The only true ocean liner is the QM2, that I'm aware of, correct me if I'm wrong. Cruise ships can cross the Atlantic but aren't meant to do it over and over like a true ocean liner is.
Good idea and you're right. With all the businesses suffering these days one would think someone somewhere would jump on a chance to offer passage for ridiculous sums of money.
My DH was supposed to fly into Europe on Friday but the flight was canceled (so glad he's home safe & sound). In fact, the entire conference had to be canceled because people can't even get from one European country to another without a gigantic headache. Then there is the fact his boss and many colleagues are stranded there. The millions even billions across the board that this is costing must be staggering.