World

‘Marine growth’ leaves cruise passengers stranded at sea for New Year

‘Biofoul’ on Viking Orion has to be removed before ship continues trip around NZ, Australia

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 02 Jan 2023 3:00PM

‘Marine growth’ leaves cruise passengers stranded at sea for New Year
Cruise liner Viking Orion moored at Station Pier in Melbourne, Australia on March 24, 2020. The cruise ship has made no port calls since leaving Wellington, New Zealand on December 26 last year due to ‘biofoul’ accumulated on its hull. – AFP pic, January 2, 2023

SYDNEY – Passengers on a luxury New Year’s cruise around New Zealand and Australia have reportedly been stranded on board for a week because of a “marine growth” on the ship’s hull.

Divers had to remove the “biofoul” – an accumulation of microorganisms, plants, algae, or small animals – from the 930-berth Viking Orion while it was anchored in international waters, the Australian government said.

The cleaning was required to protect Australia’s waters from “potentially harmful marine organisms”, the Fisheries Department said in a statement.

The nine-deck Viking Orion, built in 2018 with a spa, theatre, sports deck, and pool, left Auckland on December 23, according to tracking website vesselfinder.com.

But the cruise ship had made no port calls since leaving the New Zealand capital Wellington on December 26, the tracker said, apparently missing scheduled stops in Christchurch, Dunedin, and the Tasmanian state capital of Hobart.

After being cleaned in international waters off the South Australian state capital Adelaide, the Viking Orion was finally expected to arrive in Melbourne later tomorrow, the company and the Australian government said.

Viking confirmed it had to remove “a limited amount of standard marine growth” from the hull.

“While the ship needed to miss several stops on this itinerary in order for the required cleaning to be conducted, she is expected to resume the current itinerary,” Viking said in a statement.

“Viking is working directly with guests on compensation for the impact to their voyage,” the company said, declining to give further details. – AFP, January 2, 2023

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