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PEI

Charlottetown poised for record-breaking cruise ship season in 2024

Charlottetown is expected to break records this summer for cruise ship port calls and passenger visits.

96 ships expected starting in April, bringing up to 165,000 passengers

This year's cruise schedule also includes 15 two-ship days and six three-ship days.
The Port of Charlottetown is scheduled to see 96 cruise ship visits and as many as 165,000 passengers in 2024. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Charlottetown's 2024 cruise ship season isset to break records before it has even begun.

P.E.I.'s capital is scheduled to welcome 96 ships this season, with the potential for 165,000 passengers. A record 87 vesselsvisited the harbourlast season.

This year's passenger count would represent a 37 per cent increase from the roughly 120,000 visitors who arrived in port in 2023.

The first cruise ship of the season, the MSC Poesia, is scheduled to arrive April 8, about two and a half weeks earlier than the first port call in 2023.

"It's pretty staggering when you think about [the numbers]," said Mike Cochrane, CEO of the Charlottetown Harbour Authority.

"We're increasing our ship calls and we're increasing passenger capacity, which means bigger ships are coming into our region."

A man with short cropped hair and a dark blue Helly Hansen jacket with a view of Charlottetown Harbour in the background.
Mike Cochrane is the CEO of the Charlottetown Harbour Authority. (Laura Meader/CBC )

While the fall months are traditionally busy for Charlottetown's port, Cochrane said it's "fantastic" to see an increase ofships booked for the spring and summer.

The busiest day of the season is expected to be Oct. 1. Four cruise ships carrying up to 6,000 passengers are scheduled to arrive on the same day.

Big ships, big money

The big ships mean big money for Charlottetownand the province in general. Cochrane said the direct economic impact of cruise visits last year was around $21.5 million.

For the harbour authority and tourism groups and operators, it's a welcome sign that the cruise business is flourishing again after two years of a pandemic shutdown.

"The appetite in our region, and especially Charlottetown, is proof of demand," he said. "We have beautiful landscapes and the people, and you combine that with a very engaged tourism industry and I think you have a recipe for success."

Cochrane calls cruise visits "managed tourism," meaning Island operators can plan ahead to provide cruise passengers with experiences in an efficient way.

"You know when they come, you know how many are coming, you know exactly what their requirements are and you know exactly when they're leaving," he said. "I think that's really the crux of how P.E.I. has grown as a destination."

With files from Mainstreet P.E.I.