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Bordeaux mayor seeks to ban cruise ships from city centre

The mayor of Bordeaux is looking to ban cruise ships from docking in the city centre after complaints that they are ugly and polluting.

Bordeaux mayor seeks to ban cruise ships from city centre
The Seven Seas Mariner cruise ship (R) docking on the Garonne River along the quays in downtown Bordeaux, south-western France, on August 16, 2024. (Photo by ROMAIN PERROCHEAU / AFP)

The south-west French city of Bordeaux is a popular stop-off point for cruise ships, and the number of ships stopping over in the city centre has doubled in the past decade,

City officials have so far been successful in limiting the total number allowed to dock in the city centre to around 40 per year, but now the mayor Pierre Hurmic wants them out of the city centre altogether.

Cruise ships currently dock at the Port de la Lune, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and can travel from the Atlantic ocean inland to the city of Bordeaux thanks to the large estuary of the river Gironde, which is crucial for trade as well as tourism.

Recently, Bordeaux’s city council proposed that cruise ships moor along the right bank of the Garonne instead – this would put them downstream from the Chaban-Delmas lifting bridge and out of the central parts of the city.

Why change the location?

It is largely to address aesthetic and environmental concerns, as other French cities, like Marseille, have sought to do in recent years.

“More and more people in Bordeaux are being disturbed by the arrival of cruise ships in the city centre, and it’s becoming increasingly unpleasant,” Mayor Pierre Hurmic, from the Green Party, told AFP, adding that they resemble “actual floating buildings in some of the most aesthetically pleasing parts of the city”.

This is one of several environmental plans Hurmic has for the city. He has also proposed other ambitious projects, such as covering the ring road with solar panels.

READ MORE: Bordeaux’s epic plan to cover the entire ring road with solar panels

As for the cruise ships, Julien, a 37-year-old Bordeaux resident told AFP that “visually, they are not the most beautiful… The project to have them parked a little further north would not be bad at all”.

“For me these ships are big polluters, they have no place in the city centre”, added another resident, Charlotte, 32.

The relocation of the ships away from the city centre could also be a way to encourage more environmentally friendly boats that rely on electricity and to limit the polluting diesel engines. 

Building the necessary infrastructure on the current docking site, “in the heart of the UNESCO perimeter”, would prove to be “very imposing and extremely costly”, the mayor said, noting that it would be “much easier” to do it on the right bank.

According to the Grand Port Maritime de Bordeaux, the project is still “at the technical and regulatory studies stage”. 

The project is nevertheless controversial.

In an interview with the regional newspaper Sud Ouest in July, the president of the Bordeaux-Gironde Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCI), Patrick Seguin, said that the “decision would have heavy consequences for Bordeaux trade”, adding his frustration that the CCI had not been involved in the discussion.

According to a study by geographer Victor Piganiol, a cruise passenger “spends an average of €150 a day and up to €200 during a stopover” in Bordeaux, compared with an average of €89 in Le Havre, €80 in La Rochelle and €44 in Marseille.

This higher spending in Bordeaux is mostly explained by people purchasing wine bottles.

“When they pass through Bordeaux, the cruise promotional brochures highlight the vineyards and their prestigious appellations”, the researcher said. Visits to nearby châteaux are often organised and included in the cruise package.

Georges Simon, president of the Bordeaux Mon Commerce association of traders and artisans, told AFP that he is not “opposed” to the project and understands the issues, particularly ecological, but he expressed concerns about the new choice in mooring location.

“If tourists stop in Bordeaux, it’s to visit Bordeaux. It’s not to visit empty quays a few kilometers before the city centre (…) There will need to be some kind of solution,” he said.

The town hall has considered this and they are counting on a network of river shuttles to transport visitors from one bank to the other. They believe that docking ships in a “less congested” area will also facilitate the use of buses to travel around the département and the region.

Still, Victor Piganiol was doubtful. “I don’t know if the average cruise passenger who just came here to do a bit of tourism in the city will be able to motivate himself to cross the Garonne or take a bus.”

As for the cruise passengers themselves, one of them – American Rony Bass who arrived last weekend aboard the Seven Seas Mariner ship, said: “For us, it’s great to be in the heart of Bordeaux.” 

“We’re free to explore the city on foot with a map. Otherwise, we’d have to take a taxi and do the same on the way back.”

Member comments

  1. The cruise ships are a visual disaster here, as in the Venetian lagoon. The numbers they disgorge into increasingly fragile environments have to be better managed.

  2. I have seen the impact of huge cruise ships dumping thousands of people on the center of a city and it is NOT pretty. It is not unreasonable to ask these tourists to avail of river shuttles or taxies into the center of the “beautiful, historic city” they have presumably come to see.

  3. Overtourism is destroying the cities it visits – both their environments and communities. More needs to be done to curb the Disneyfication of people’s homes and livelihoods

  4. Overtourism is destroying the cities it visits – both their environments and communities. More needs to be done to curb the Disneyfication of people’s homes and livelihoods

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TRAVEL NEWS

Eurostar says may scrap links to Amsterdam from 2025

Eurostar's chief has threatened to scrap the rail route to the Netherlands from 2025 because of doubts over when Amsterdam's international terminal will reopen.

Eurostar says may scrap links to Amsterdam from 2025

“Could the Netherlands be temporarily cut off from one of the most essential rail links in Europe?” Gwendoline Cazenave asked in an editorial for Dutch business daily Het Financieele Dagblad on Wednesday.

The Dutch network was suffering “reliability problems, capacity restrictions and delays that are particularly inconvenient for passengers”, she argued.

The company could cut both its Amsterdam-Rotterdam-London and Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Paris routes in 2025, Cazanave’s editorial said.

“In the absence of clarity from the Dutch rail network (…), Eurostar will be forced to suspend connections between Amsterdam-Rotterdam and London and Paris during 2025”, warns Gwendoline Cazenave.

With Amsterdam’s main station undergoing extensive work since June the direct London route has temporarily closed.

Cazenave said that on various sections of track Eurostar trains had been forced to halve their speed to 80 kph since November.

Since the direct route to London was halted for a scheduled six months through to year’s end, passengers have had to disembark in Brussels for passport control before completing their journey.

The Amsterdam upgrade was meant to take six months, but Eurostar has deplored what it says is the lack of guarantees on a resumption date.

“Eurostar is fully prepared to reopen direct connections at the beginning of 2025, as planned,” said Cazenave.

But other work has also been announced from early 2025 in the station, which would limit the availability of platforms, she added. The London connection requires the station to also provide border control services, as since Brexit the lines crosses an EU external border. 

In 2023, Eurostar said it had carried a total 4.2 million passengers between the Netherlands and France, Britain and Belgium.

French national railway operator SNCF Voyageurs holds a majority stake in Eurostar.

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