What is the Average Lifespan of a Cruise Ship?
The average lifespan of a cruise ship is 30 years. 30 years in the salty ocean water and air do damage to the ship. Every 5 years ships are required to drydock and be inspected for safety, repaired and refreshed but that does not stop the damage.
Ships take a lot of harsh abuse. There is no real downtime.
All facilities on the ship are used 24/7. Cabins are given around 3 hours to be
cleaned between guests. Kitchens cook thousands of meals 3 times a day and then
cook more food for snacks day and night. Entertainment is also active all day
and night.
Ships have minimal access to getting to the “guts” and
replacing/repairing old engines, wiring and plumbing. To do major upgrades they
have to take the ship to dry dock and that is expensive. Lines do the best they
can cleaning and maintaining the ships. Time, exposure to salt water and air,
constant use and the fact technology changes and can’t always be
update/changed/added to “age” the ships. Disney Cruise Line is top in
maintaining the ships, but even Disney can’t stop the march of time. The older
the ship the higher the cost of maintaining them.
What happens to a ship that is too old? The ship can be sold
to a lower-class cruise line. This does happen a lot. The old ship will go into
drydock and be reimagined, repainted and renamed by the line that purchased
her. She could continue to sail there for another 20 years or so. But you can tell
the ship is old. The ship can be scrapped, recoverable items such as copper
wire, steel and other items can be removed and recycled. Parts are melted down
and material reused. Want can’t be recycled is dumped. A recent and good thing
done with retired ships is sinking them. Yes, this has been done for hundreds
of years but now there is new twist. Now ships are being sunk where coral reefs
have been destroyed or damaged. They remove all items that can damage the
environment from the ship and set it up to encourage fish to come in and enjoy
it. These are the 3 major things done with old ships.
Disney Magic turns 30 in 2028, and Disney Wonder turn 30 in
2029. Along with the information above is enough to make a DCL fan cringe. Does
that mean that Magic and Wonder MUST retire in 28 and 29? No. As long as the
ships are deemed safe by Maritime regulations and guests keep booking cruises
on them, I believe they will keep going. How long do I think they can
reasonably keep them going? I’m going to guess 2035 or at the longest 2040.
Disney cannot sell any of their ships to other lines. There
is too much Intellectual Property (IP) on the ships that cannot be allowed to
go to another company. Scrapping or turning them into coral reefs are the
standard options. Disney is anything but standard! I’ve heard rumors that
insiders have been begging for the ships to be turned into hotels! Pull them up
to a dock permanently. Hook them up for shore power and make them a hotel! Personally,
I think this is a win-win for Disney and fans alike!
Is it still worth it to sail on Magic and Wonder? YES!! The
ships are beautiful and all amenities are functioning well, with only a few
issues noted. Disney will do their best to keep them going. I believe that 2 of
the 3 of the 5th class of ships were ordered to replace them. But
they may order more ships! DCL is expanding, yes, they will lose 2 ships soon
but gain more! I believe there may be announcements about more ships being
ordered. Watch for D23 in August!

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