
While we wait for Royal Caribbean to reveal their health protocols for cruises from North America or Europe, rival cruise line Carnival shared their plans.

Carnival Cruise Line revealed its new health protocols for its cruise ships once they restart that include a variety of comprehensive changes for guests and crew members.
Carnival is calling it its "CruiseHealth Program", and it applies to all of Carnival Corporations brands as well. These rules are evolving, and Carnival expects them to change with new insight into public health evolves.
The goal of these protocols is to keep guests, crew members, shoreside employees, and ports ships visit healthy from the global health crisis.





You can read them all here.

Thus far, Royal Caribbean has only announced its health policies for cruises on Quantum of the Seas from Singapore, although most are likely to be carried over to sailings elsewhere in the world.
The Healthy Sail Panel, a joint venture between the Royal Caribbean Group and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, has been working since summer 2020 to craft policies for cruise ships to use onboard.
The panel's 74 recommendations have become the cornerstone of the cruise industry's approach to a healthy return to sailing. But those recommendations need to be converted into policy.

Royal Caribbean has said the new protocols would be issued "relatively soon" for a while, although no timeline for its announcement has been shared.
The delay in seeing Royal Caribbean's rules may be a product of the ever changing approach to the current health crisis.
Royal Caribbean Group Chairman and CEO Richard Fain spoke recently how the arrival of a vaccine has changed their outlook on the current situation.
"Previously, we expected cruising to resume based on creating a virtual bubble of safety on a ship, even if the rest of the country was experiencing significant spread," he admitted to viewers.
"Today we envision that the key, but not the exclusive factor, will be the vaccines rather than purely the protocols."

Royal Caribbean's work in the two months that Quantum of the Seas has been sailing in Singapore has provided invaluable experience to run through a real-world situation that luckily had no repercussions.
"The false positive gave us a real world chance to test our procedures, and they performed well."
"Such experiences really allow us to test our processes and prepare better for a full operation."