Cruise Industry Pushes Back on Hawaii's Plan To Cut Port Calls

Image: Celebrity Millennium sailing near the mountains of Hawaii. (Photo Credit: Adobe Stock/jdross75)
Image: Celebrity Millennium sailing near the mountains of Hawaii. (Photo Credit: Adobe Stock/jdross75)
Laurie Baratti
by Laurie Baratti
Last updated: 6:35 PM ET, Sun August 17, 2025

Hawaii’s plan to slash cruise ship visits has the local cruise sector urging a rethink, with business leaders and policy groups saying there are more collaborative ways to reduce emissions than simply cutting calls.

The Hawaii Department of Transportation (DOT) has proposed a 50 percent reduction in cruise ship visits by 2030, followed by an additional 50 percent cut by 2035. The plan makes an exception for Hawaii’s only homeported ship, Norwegian Cruise Line’s Pride of America, but would affect other large vessels that include Hawaii as part of their itineraries.

Local businesses and policy groups connected to the cruise industry say they want to see an open conversation about the plan. They argue there are alternatives to simply reducing cruise traffic, including investing in cleaner ship technologies.

Denise Clark, a consultant who works with the cruise industry and Hawaiian businesses, organized a meeting of 55 Hawaii-based stakeholders on August 7 to start shaping a response to the DOT proposal.

Curtis Chee, director of cruise service at MC&A, which handles cruise turnarounds and shore excursions, emphasized that local businesses want a greener future, too—but eliminating calls could hurt livelihoods. His team of roughly 50 employees works exclusively on Pride of America operations.

"We are so eager and anxious to jump in and say, 'What can we do to help you get to this plan without the elimination of vessels?'" Chee said, according to Travel Weekly, "Working with the cruise lines to find out which vessels already have low emissions, which vessels already could have the potential for shore power, and see if that fleet is able to come to the Islands."

Environmental policy is a top priority for Hawaii’s Governor Josh Green. In May, lawmakers approved an 11 percent cruise tax aimed at funding sustainability efforts. But some local experts say collaboration is key to making the plan work. 

Malia Blom Hill, policy director at the Grassroots Institute of Hawaii, a nonprofit advocating for limited government, noted that Hawaiian culture favors collaboration over confrontation, suggesting that cruise lines would benefit from partnering with policymakers instead of opposing them.

"If the perception is that you're just trying to move in and push people around, it definitely sets up not a combativeness but a sort of, 'You're not one of us. You're not here. You don't have our interests at heart," she said, according to the Travel Weekly report. 

DOT officials have indicated flexibility if the cruise industry shows a willingness to adopt emission-reduction measures. Dre Kalili, a deputy director at the department, said ships capable of using shore power or other low-emission technologies might still be able to visit Hawaii. "I think we are open to that,” he said, according to the Travel Weekly report. “But based on the data that we have and the trends that we see, [reducing cruise calls] emerged as a strategy."

Clark points out, however, that Hawaii currently lacks shore power infrastructure. Building it could provide a solution, but she worries cruise lines might scale back itineraries prematurely after seeing the state’s intentions. "We know that the port itinerary planners work so far in advance that what happens today affects us two years, three years from now," she said, according to the Travel Weekly report.

Despite its Pride of America’s planned exemption, Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings said it "welcomes an open, collaborative dialogue" with the DOT to "refine the plan and best support our shared goals of reducing emissions, enhancing energy security and expanding access to clean, zero- or low-emission fuels,” according to the Travel Weekly report. Other cruise lines deferred comment to the Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA), which said it supports "practical and effective environmental solutions that positively impact the communities we visit."


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Laurie Baratti

Laurie Baratti

Assistant Editor

Laurie Baratti is an Assistant Editor for TravelPulse. She is a San Diego-based journalist whose work has previously appeared in publications like TravelAge West, SPACE, Modern Home + Living, Montage, and Sandals Life magazines. Travel writing has long been her passion, and she is always looking for excuses to explore the world outside of her native California. Laurie is also a lifelong equestrian, a proud pet-parent, and an underground advocate of the Oxford comma.

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