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Venice moving to ban cruise ships from Grand Canal

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Jason

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The eyesore of cruise ships on Venice's famous skyline could soon become ancient history, as the behemoths are set to be banned from the city's waterways.

The new proposals by Italy's Environment Minister follow a crackdown on water traffic, after the death of a German tourist two weeks ago.

Joachim Vogel, 50, a professor of criminal law, was crushed against a dock by a reversing vaporetto water bus as he took a tour with his family by gondola near the Rialto Bridge.

The Costa Fascinosa cruise ship in Venice, crossing the sea in front of St Mark's Square. The colossal craft are set to be banned from the city's waterways

The tragic accident has prompted authorities to bring in a series of new safety regulations including 'a floating congestion zone' on the Grand Canal to ease the chaotic rush hour waterway traffic. Breathalyser tests for gondoliers are also imminent.

Venice's proud residents have long been up in arms about the presence of large cruise ships passing through the lagoon, with a flotilla of protesters taking to the waters in June.

Lobbyists argue that the huge ships, sometimes ten storeys high, erode the canals and the city’s fragile foundations, contribute to the worsening flooding that occurs every winter and damage the delicate eco-systems of the lagoon.

The cruise companies pay huge port fees for the privilege, but their passengers frequently eat and sleep on board and contribute little direct revenue to restaurants and hotels.

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Tragedy: Gondoliers attend a ceremony in memory of Joachim Reihnard Vogel, who was killed in a collision on Venice's Grand Canal

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The anti-cruise ship lobby claim the huge vessels are damaging Venice's fragile foundations and eroding its canals (pictured is the Disney Magic cruise ship)

The Italian Environment Minister Andrea Orlando said he would put the proposals in front of cross party parliamentary committee in October.

He told the Italian daily Il Gazettino: 'There will always be a margin of risk and even that margin is too high a risk.

'The problem is not just the presence of large ships in St Marks basin but in general the presence of ships in the lagoon.'

He expected a 'concrete response that could be translated into immediate action', as the problem is getting worse all the time, he said.

'The number of cruise ships passing in front of St Marks’s Cathedral has grown by seven per cent this year alone.'

The proposals would essentially put in action emergency legislation drafted after the Concordia tragedy, that would prevent ships of more than 500 tonnes coming within two nautical miles of landscapes of value such as the Venice lagoon or fragile environments such as the marine sanctuary between Sardinia and north-east Italy.

Venice's mayor wants to see cruise tourists dock at Porto Marghera, a town blighted by industrial pollution. Other suggestions have included a floating off-shore port.

Alternative solutions would see the number of cruise ships allowed to enter the lagoon severely limited, or the dredging of a new approach to the same cruise passenger terminals but avoiding the narrow canals around St Marks Square.

On Saturday another huge cruise ship was photographed passing within yards of St Marks, in 'a bow' to the city inevitably raising the spectre of the Costa Concordia cruise ship, which sank after hitting rocks off the coast of Tuscany during just such a bow to the island of Giglio last year.

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People in Venice have reacted with fury to footage showing a cruise ship which appears to pass within yards of the city's fragile shoreline - and show a water taxi, circled, squeezed between the liner and the bank.

Tensions were raised in July after the Carnival Sunshine, which is owned by the same parent company as the notorious Costa Concordia, allegedly passed within yards of the city’s bank while performing ‘a sail by salute’ to a major company shareholder.

Film footage appeared to show the 110 thousand ton liner squeezing a vaporetto water taxi and other boats between the ship and the bank. Carnival denied any wrongdoing.

By Hannah Roberts, The Daily Mail

For more cruise news & articles go to http://www.cruisecrazies.com/index.html

Re-posted on CruiseCrazies.com - Cruise News, Articles, Forums, Packing List, Ship Tracker, and more

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I have to say that I love Venice. It's always been a highpoint of my visits to Italy. The entire area is tremendously fragile and in danger from not only cruise ships but many other vessels that ply the waters that surround the city.

It would be a shame to lose the ability to visit the amazing city via cruise ship. It's a wonderfully popular port but the damage that's ensuing outweighs the benefits significantly.

Perhaps a reduced number of calls with ships mooring in the Med and tenders into the city might be a solution...

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