Corsica Ferries Sardinia Ferries | |
Foundation: | 1967 |
Location City: | Corsica, Bastia Italy, Vado Ligure |
Predecessor: | Corsica Line |
Key People: | Andrea Duilio |
Industry: | Shipping, Transport |
Parent: | Lozali S.A |
Owner: | Duilio Coorporation |
Homepage: | www.corsicaferries.co.uk |
Corsica Ferries - Sardinia Ferries (Corsica Ferries France SAS – Forship SpA) is a Franco-Italian ferry company[1] that operates traffic to and from the islands of Corsica, Sardinia and Elba.
The ferry company was founded in 1967 by the Corsican Pascal Lota under the name of Corsica Line with one ferry, the Corsica Express. Since the company’s humble beginnings it has continuously grown and is today the market leader to Corsica and Sardinia.
Corsica Sardinia Ferries is the premier ferry operator on the Western Mediterranean Sea transporting more than 2.8 million passengers annually aboard their ferries running to and from France and Italy to Corsica, Sardinia and Elba.[2]
Corsica Sardinia Ferries operate two return routes from Italy to Sardinia and 10 return routes from France and Italy to Corsica, with a total of up to 13 crossings daily.
The fleet currently consists of 14 vessels. Thanks to its no-frills economical model, the company today holds a market share of 68.7% of the maritime traffic to Corsica (2017).[3]
In 2005, Forship Spa, a subsidiary of Corsica Sardinia Ferries, has been condemned to pay 490 000 euros by the Tribunal of Marseille for having "voluntary discharged at sea" offshore of the Cap Corse on May 12, 2004.[4]
Ship | Built | Entered Service | Gross tonnage | Length | Width | Passengers | Vehicles | Knots | Flag | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MS Corsica Marina Seconda | 1974 | 1986 | 121 m | 19 m | 1,500 | 550 | 19 | |||
MS Mega Express | 2001 | 2001 | 173 m | 24.5 m | 1.756 | 550 | 29 | |||
MS Mega Express Two | 2001 | 2001 | 173 m | 24.5 m | 1.756 | 550 | 29 | |||
MS Mega Express Three | 2001 | 2004 | 212 m | 25 m | 2.100 | 650 | 30,5 | |||
MS Mega Express Four | 1995 | 2006 | 174 m | 24 m | 2.000 | 650 | 27 | |||
MS Mega Express Five | 1993 | 2009 | 170 m | 25 m | 1.800 | 600 | 26 | |||
MS Mega Smeralda | 1985 | 2008 | 171.5 m | 27.6 m | 2.000 | 550 | 22 | |||
MS Mega Andrea | 1986 | 2015 | 171.5 m | 27.6 m | 2.000 | 550 | 22 | |||
MS Mega Regina | 1985 | 2021 | 175.7 m | 28.4 m | 2.500 | 665 | 22 | |||
MS Mega Victoria | 1988 | 2022 | 169.4 m | 27.6 m | 2.420 | 450 | 21,5 | |||
MS Pascal Lota | 2008 | 2017 | 177 m | 27.6 m | 2.080 | 665 | 27 | |||
MS Corsica Express Three | 1996 | 1996 | 103 m | 14.5 m | 535 | 150 | 37 | |||
Ship | Built | In service | Current status |
---|---|---|---|
Corsica Express | 1968–1975 | Scrapped in 1986. | |
Corsica Ferry | 1972–1976 | Scrapped as Azzura II in Aliaga, Turkey in 2011. | |
Corsica Star | 1973–1980 | Sank as Jassim in Wingate Reef in 2003. | |
Corsica Serena | 1975–1981 | Scrapped in Gadani Beach, Pakistan in 2003. | |
Corsica Nova | 1976–1988 | Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 2011. | |
A Regina | 1979–1985 | Scrapped in 1989. | |
Corsica Marina | 1977–1990 | Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 2013. | |
Corsica Viva | 1980–1985 | Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 2004. | |
Sardinia Viva | 1980–1994 | Scrapped as Derin Deniz in Alang, India in 2004. | |
Elba Nova | 1992–1998 | Lady Carmela since 2019. | |
Sardinia Nova | 1966 | 1982–2006 | Scrapped as Atlas Han in Iskenderun, Turkey in 2015. |
Corsica Serena Seconda | 1974 | 1983–2011 | Moby Niki for Moby Lines since 2017. |
Corsica Express Seconda | 1995 | 1996–2015 | Paros Jet for Seajets since 2015. |
Sardinia Regina | 1972 | 1985–2021 | Kevalay Queen since 2021. |
Corsica Victoria | 1973 | 1986–2023 | Camomilla since 2023. |
Sardinia Vera | 1975 | 1987–2024 | Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 2024. |