Showing posts with label Ferry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ferry. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2016

New Ferry Service From Granada to Tangier


The German FRS shipping company has announced that it will launch a new service between Motril (Granada, southern Spain) and the port of Tangier


This connection, which will focus mainly on the transport of goods, will be operational during the second half of January at a rate of seven weekly crossings.  The head of FRS, José Carlos Delgado said, "This service is a new opportunity for our customers, who can now reduce the transport distance, which will help reduce transportation costs".

The German company is one of the main companies in the field of passenger and freight transport in the Strait of Gibraltar with over 1.7 million passengers and 400,000 vehicles transported per year.

The new route is in addition to services linking the port of Motril with the Moroccan cities of Nador and Al Hoceima.

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Thursday, September 04, 2014

Tanger Med Port Experiences Massive Passenger Numbers


Recently The View from Fez reported on the long delays experienced by passengers travelling between Spain and Morocco from the Tanger Med Port (see story here).  Now the statistics are available and shed light on what is always a seasonal problem at the end of the August holidays


Between the 23rd and 31st of August some 187,500 passengers and 47,200 vehicles embarked at Tanger Med heading to Algeciras.

According to figures released by the Tanger Med Port Authority the peak was recorded on August 29 with the arrival of 32 000 passengers and 153 coaches in a single day.

As we reported, waiting times were up to 12 hours. However, the Authority did act to alleviate the situation and managed to achieve 38 sailings thanks to the arrival of two ships as reinforcements. The fleet plan had not initially included the extra ships which allowed for four additional rotations on the day of the peak.

Total traffic recorded from 05 June to 31 August increased of 17% for passengers and 11% for vehicles as compared to the same period of 2013. Bus traffic has shown a marked increase, growing by 66% over the same period in 2013.



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Monday, September 01, 2014

Ferry Crossings Between Spain and Tangier ~ Passengers Experience Long Delays


The Tangier Med Port Authority has announced that following the massive influx of passengers arriving at the port, it has now exceeded its capacity, particularly on the ferry service to Algeciras

Waiting times for embarkation this last weekend were around 12 hours. Authorities say that the problem is due to the massive number of passengers returning from holidays.

Last year the waiting times were even worse with passengers experiencing delays of between 14 and 18 hours.



The problem is expected last until today (September 1st). The Tanger Med Port Authority asked travelers to make suitable arrangements and, if possible, extend their holidays for a couple of days.


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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Moroccan Ferries in French Limbo

A waiter enters the officers’ mess hall and, very formally, lays down a plate of lentils and mutton. Under a portrait of the Moroccan royal family, a clock strikes noon, lunchtime aboard the Bni N'sar. Near the ship’s empty swimming pool, sailors – each with his own task – are working busily with tools, ropes and other equipment, as if this were just an ordinary day.  Except it’s not.  This report from Le Monde.


KAFKAESQUE FATE FOR CREW OF MOROCCAN FERRIES STUCK IN FRANCE

In its own way, the Bni N'sar is sinking – and everyone knows it. Of course, this isn’t one of those epic catastrophes that involve a brutal storm or a deadly run in with an iceberg. Instead, the Bni N'sar is in the midst of a motionless shipwreck, one that’s being caused not by mother nature, but by people in suits and ties.


For the past five months the Moroccan boat has been holed up in the harbor of Sète, in southern France. It’s one of three ferries that have been ordered by a court in Montpellier to be seized because of debts accrued by the Tangier-based company that owns them. Stuck on board the three vessels are about 200 crewmen and their officers.

On board, everything is stopping little by little. The ships are out of fuel. The lights have been switched off and it’s getting colder and colder. There’s no hot water anymore, barely any cold water, and the toilets are sealed. The paint peels off and mussels have begun to colonize sea water pipes. The crew has not been paid for months.

Sometimes, a van delivers some food. Occasionally, when food runs out completely, the company – which is called Comanav-Comarit – sends 1,000 or 2,000 euros, just enough to allow one of the officers to buy baguettes and cans of tuna. The crew members are ashamed. “The fact that our company gave us up is like a stain on the Moroccan flag,” one crew member explains. Associations sometimes drop off clothes and food in front of the ferries, but the crew members won’t take it. “We are not beggars: we have a noble and courageous job and we should be the ones who give to others.”

Another ship claimed by debt

In Sète, like in any other harbor, these lost ships stories have become commonplace: they are everywhere, more and more every year, abandoned because of bankruptcies and failures. According to the International Transport Workers' Federation, only 6,000 of the 40,000 ships in circulation meet standards. “And the crisis is leading us to an even worse situation,” explains Jean-Luc Bou, a teacher who in 2004 helped organize a Defense Association for Sète’s many abandoned sailors.

The Marrakech - full steam to nowhere

On Jan. 6, when the Marrakech – one of the three ferries – arrived in Sète, it had just enough fuel to reach the shore – not a drop more. Comanav-Comarit had purchased the fuel on credit, digging itself even deeper into debt. In total the ferry company, which has been transporting people between France and Morocco for three decades, owes some 200 million euros. Which is why upon its arrival in Sète, the Marrakech was met by a bailiff. The day before, two of Comanav-Comarit’s other ships, the Bni N'sar and Biladi, were also grounded.

Passengers who’d gathered at the port to take the ferries back to Morocco were advised over loudspeakers that their trips were cancelled, without any refund or rescheduling. Security guards and dogs were eventually needed to evacuate the crowd.

Aboard the jammed ferries, the crew members were told the situation wouldn’t last forever. But their optimism was short-lived: the three ferries never left. Calling home has become a torturous task for some of the crew. Families, for whom money isn't arriving anymore, “constantly talk about bills that can’t be paid,” one technician sighs. Some crew members need to sell their houses and take their children out of private schools.

Each sailor for himself

The company, meanwhile, has been conspicuously quiet. It has yet to offer the stranded crew members a solution to their predicament, but warns them that they’ll be fired if they complain. Only Hervé Parage and Jacques Casabianca, two French captains who take turns at the head of the Bni N’sar, allow crew members to speak openly about the problem and let journalists go onboard. When Hervé Parage tries to consult officers from the two other ferries, they tell him to mind his own business.

Aboard the ferries, each captain has begun to decree his own laws. On the Biladi, young crew members were not allowed to come ashore for weeks. The captain is Croatian and he speaks neither French nor Arabic. He watches TV all day, holed up in his cabin, the only place on the boat that still has electricity. Another officer soon took power, instituting an 11:30 p.m. curfew.

Marrakech’s captain, Ahcen Nabil, 53, tries not to complain. The company doesn’t take his calls and he doesn’t try to gather his men anymore because he has nothing to tell them. For him, commanding a stationary boat is even worse than facing a storm on the high seas.

An Italian company is expected to take over the Tanger-Sète service soon. That will bring traffic back to Sète’s harbor, which has a shortfall of 1.5 million euros because of the lack of ferries and their 200,000 annual passengers. But the future of Comanav-Comarit’s ferries and crew members is still unclear. “If we leave, it’s over. There’s no way for us to keep our jobs and to get our wages,” a sailor says. Some of them are afraid to go back home, because of their debts. A repatriation plan is under consideration.

In another corner of the harbor, a landing dock has been nicknamed “the oblivion pier.” This is where abandoned ships come to die. The Marrakech could be headed there soon. In the meantime the situation is becoming less like something from Kafka and more like Waiting for Godot nothing is happening.

Read more from Le Monde in French.


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Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Yacht marina planned for Tangier



In December, The View from Fez team visited Tangier and found a city well worth visiting, one that has left its somewhat sleazy past behind and is now a great place to spend a few days (see the story here). A new yachting marina is planned for the 'white city', with construction starting next year.

Tangier port

"This major project will make the port of Tangier and its bay one of the top marinas and cruise destinations in the Mediterranean," said President of Tangier Port Development, Abdelouafi Laftit, in a statement recently.

Among other new developments, the new port will accommodate bigger cruise ships and pleasure boats. Mr. Laftit also said that additional space will be available for hotels and other tourism activities in an effort to promote new services in the port area. Space will be dedicated to sea fishing, which is currently one of most dynamic activities in the port.

In addition, a residential development will be built in the vicinity which will include leisure and cultural activities.

The passenger ferry port will move to a new terminal at the massive Tanger-Med port, located twenty kilometers to the east of the city. This change will be phased in between April and October this year. The new terminal will be able to handle the large number of passengers to and from southern Europe. Moving the port to Tanger-Med means that the city will no longer be congested with heavy truck traffic. This is intended to make Tangier a more leisurely, clean and cultured city that will attract more visitors from Europe and elsewhere.


Saturday, July 11, 2009

Spain to Morocco by Ferry




One of the quickest and cheapest ways of getting from mainland Europe to Morocco is by ferry. Travel times are from several hours to as little as 35 minutes, but faster travel by catamaran is much more expensive.

Approximate Travel times.
Tarifa to Tangier by FRS, approximately 35 minutes
Algeciras to Tangier by FRS, 70 minutes
Algeciras to Tangier by Acciona, 2.5 hrs
Algeciras to Cueta with Acciona 35 minutes by fast ferry. Normal ferry 1.5hrs
Algeciras to Ceuta by Euroferrys (catamaran) 35minutes.
Malaga to Melilla with Acciona approximately 7 hrs .

The services between Algeciras and Tangier run eight times a day, from Ceuta, ten times.

Prices vary, but are all reasonable. For example, Algeciras to Tanger is from 46 €, Almeria to Nador from 50 € and Almeria to Melilla from 33 €.

You can book and pay on line at FRS who have special deals and also at Maroc Ferry.com. You will find a links at the bottom of this post. The sites are in English, French and Dutch.

Ferry routes

While there are many possible routes, here are some examples of departure times.

ALGECIRAS TO TANGIER
Departure at 06h30 - Arrival at 07h00
Departure at 07h00 - Arrival at 08h30
Departure at 09h30 - Arrival at 11h00
Departure at 11h30 - Arrival at 12h00
Departure at 15h30 - Arrival at 17h00
Departure at 16h30 - Arrival at 17h00
Departure at 18h00 - Arrival at 19h30
Departure at 21h25 - Arrival at 22h00

CEUTA TO ALGECIRAS
Departure at 07h30 - Arrival at 08h15
Departure at 09h30 - Arrival at 10h15
Departure at 10h30 - Arrival at 11h15
Departure at 12h30 - Arrival at 13h15
Departure at 13h30 - Arrival at 14h15
Departure at 15h30 - Arrival at 16h15
Departure at 16h30 - Arrival at 17h15
Departure at 18h30 - Arrival at 19h15
Departure at 19h30 - Arrival at 20h15
Departure at 22h30 - Arrival at 23h15

More info: FRS WEBSITE