The Marseille Provence Cruise Club coordinates 10 food and furniture donation operations from laid-up cruise ships in favour of local charities

In 2020, more than 22 tons of food, blankets and furniture coming from the laid-up ships docked in the port of Marseille were given to the most deprived people. The cruise activity suddenly stopped on the 16th of March 2020 with the declaration of world pandemic and strict lockdown of populations.

Since then, except a slight resumption during summer 2020, the activity has been stopped and is forbidden in French ports.

With the health crisis, the cruise industry and the ecosystem have been strongly affected.

Globally, the Port of Marseille Fos within which is the Marseille Provence Cruise Terminal have been welcoming 23 cruise ships since March 2020. During the repatriation phase in March and April and in full coordination with local authorities, more than 6.500 passengers and crew members have been safely disembarked and taken back home.

Despite the delicate situation, as of the lockdown has been announced and the French decree banning cruise activities declared on the 16th of March 2020 and thanks to the free initiative of cruise companies stuck in Marseille, ten food and furniture donation operations have been engineered by the Marseille Provence Cruise Club, with the full support of the Marseille Marine Firemen, the Customs, the Port of Marseille Fos Authority, the Marseille Provence Cruise Terminal, the Region Prefecture Authority and the local charities.

These operations allowed to collect 22 tons of food and 150m3 of furniture, to the benefit of local charities, which redistribute these to people in great need; 2020 being a year of increased distress for families. As a result, 48 000 meals were redistributed, feeding 2 200 persons, or 22 meals per person.

It is to be noted that the Banque Alimentaire (French Food Bank) is a partner of most of local charities and therefore has redistributed about 5 500 tons of food and products in 2020. The help held by cruise ships has been therefore more than welcomed by charities, in a moment of great difficulty for an increasing number of persons in these rough times of crisis.

Before the success of such initiatives over a year and in such a delicate context, cruise companies are ready to repeat the experience, still for free, increasing, in that respect, their territorial anchoring in Marseille and Provence.

Jean-François Suhas, The Marseille Provence Cruise Club President, speaks out:

“Cruise companies are at the very heart of the success of cruise operations in Marseille, whether through its stopovers at the cruise terminal (MPCT) or through its technical stops at the Shipyard of Marseille (Chantier Naval de Marseille). In 2020 and from now on I hope, they honour once more their contribution to our territory by committing themselves humanly, then reinforcing their local anchoring, for the benefit of the most demanding people.

The 2020 ten operations have been handled perfectly. I feel deeply touched by all the implemented logistics and the links that have been forged by my team and the ones of the concerned cruise companies and charities, as well as the port services and local authorities, to allow these meaningful operations. This reflects the spirit of solidarity and mutual aid of all the companies in the cruise sector at all levels”.

The Marseille Provence Cruise Club is a strong partner to connect the stakeholders and make these salutary initiatives possible, supporting both the cruise companies and the local structures – private and public – in its first mission of common interest: to coordinate all partners for a virtuous and acceptable cruise activity which generates opportunities for the territory, in the interest of all users (residents, port operators, tourism professionals, tourists).

(MedCruise, Marseille Provence Cruise Club)

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