Quark Expeditions

Quark Expeditions, a travel company headquartered in Seattle, Washington (as of 2017), offers polar region expeditions aboard expedition ships and icebreakers. The itinerary changes between polar regions with the seasons.[not verified in body]

History

As of 2017, Quark Expeditions, a travel company, was headquartered in Seattle, Washington.[needs update] Quark Expeditions was founded in 1985 by Mike McDowell, initially specializing in small-ship dive expeditions. It then transitioned to polar expeditions, where McDowell had prior experience as the expedition leader of the MV Explorer.

In 1990–1991, McDowell chartered the MV Frontier Spirit during its inaugural season of operations for several voyages to Antarctica from Hobart, Australia and Bluff, New Zealand. After these voyages, Mike McDowell partnered with Lars Wikander.

Quark Expeditions ship, Sea Adventurer, at Griffin Inlet, Beechey Island, Nunavut, Canada

In 1998, McDowell sold his interests to Lars Wikander, who then became the company's majority owner. Three years later, Patrick Shaw joined the company as president and CEO, and Wikander moved to become chairman of the board.

In May 2007, the company became part of the UK-based TUI Travel group of companies; subsequently, in 2016, it became part of Travelopia, a division comprising some brands from the former TUI Specialist Group.

In 2012, the company reported via a trade publication that it would offer the first "carbon-neutral" polar expeditions, offsetting the carbon emissions of its vessel, Ocean Diamond. The former roll-on/roll-off vessel uses Bunker C heavy-duty oil, and one voyage produces an estimated 5,682 tons of CO2. The tour operator reported that it had signed a contract with the certifier The CarbonNeutral Company.

In 2016, the company mounted an Arctic expedition for the purpose of creating a YouTube film, a trip that included internet personalities and YouTube creators Ben Brown (the filmmaker) and Tim Kellner, as well as YouTuber Tom Scott and expedition-lead, the retired Canadian astronaut, Chris Hadfield. The company's summer 2019 program in the Arctic included sailings to "Greenland, Canada's High Arctic, the Northwest Passage and the North Pole".

In April 2021, Quark took delivery of the "199-guest" vessel, Ultramarine, a product of the Brodosplit shipyard in Split, Croatia. its first solely owned ship.

Safety incidents

As of February 8, 2023, The United States Coast Guard was investigating the death of two Americans after the capsize of an inflatable zodiac boat operating off of the World Explorer passenger ship, operated by Quark Expeditions under a Portuguese flag. The incident occurred off of Antarctica’s Elephant Island, and the conditions were described by a Quark Expeditions spokesperson as being "light winds and [a] smooth sea state", with the accident having been caused by "a breaking wave". The U.S. Coast Guard is involved in the investigation under international maritime law, as the U.S. is a "substantially interested state".[needs update]

On March 26, 2025, Quark Expedition's Ocean Explorer encountered waves estimated to have been 35-40 feet during a return leg to Ushuaia, Argentina that traversed the Drake Passage, at end of an Antarctic voyage that had begun on March 17th. The Drake Passage defines a maritime, Atlantic-Pacific transition zone lying between South America's Cape Horn and Antarctica's South Shetland Islands, where the cool, subpolar conditions of the South American Tierra del Fuego archipelago meet the frigid, polar conditions of Antarctica; as a waterway it is 600 miles wide, and approaches 3 miles deep in places. Nathan Diller of USA Today, who reported having experienced waves of 13-feet during an earlier traverse, describes the Drake Passage as a "notoriously treacherous waterway between Antarctica and South America". News reports describe the ship as being "pummeled", and include video that suggested "walls of water... nearly all that is visible from the [ship's] windows", with the ship rocking enough that people were sliding across floors, a television was observed "slamming into a wall", etc. Passengers filming and being interviewed expressed confidence in their safety, and Quark Expeditions, noting its "30 years of experience navigating polar waters" and its "purpose-built, ice-class fleet and expert crew", communicated via email that safety, and "ensuring guests are well cared for in all conditions" remained its "top priority", stating that its "ship, crew, and passengers completed their... voyage safely and without incident".

Polar expedition fleet

According to Lynn Elmhirst, Quark Expeditions "invented consumer polar expedition travel" with its 1991 expedition to the North Pole. As of this date,[when?] the company was reported to have the largest and most diverse fleet of passenger vessels in the Antarctic. Quark offers both cruises and land-based expeditions. Expeditions involve the following ships:

Sustainability & charitable initiatives

Quark Expeditions describes itself as a long-time member of the Association of Arctic Expedition Cruise Operators (AAECO) and of the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO) and describes these as "organizations that share our dedication to promote and commit to environmentally responsible tourism... to help us to ensure the footprints polar tourists leave behind are minimal", and itself as "active participants in many sustainability initiatives". In 2019, it announced a "Polar Promise" sustainability strategy.[clarification needed] In 2012, the company reported that Ocean Diamond made a carbon-neutral voyage to Antarctica.

Awards and recognition

Quark has received several industry awards, including from Travel Weekly and National Geographic.[full citation needed][full citation needed][full citation needed][full citation needed][full citation needed][full citation needed]

Further reading

  • Wenger, Michael (January 29, 2024). "Last Season for Popular Polar Expedition Ship". Polar Journal (PolarJournal.ch). Zug, Switzerland: Polar Journal AG. Archived from the original on July 14, 2024. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  • Elmhirst, Lynn (October 19, 2021). "Quark Expeditions' New Ship, Ultramarine, is an Expedition Cruising Gamechanger". Open Jaw (OpenJaw.com). Toronto, Ontario: Open Jaw Network Ltd. Retrieved April 29, 2025.

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Quark Expeditions, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.