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Mexico rejects Royal Caribbean’s Perfect Day water park on Caribbean Coast

Alicia Barcena, Mexico's Environment Minister, announced a rejection of a massive water park proposed by Royal Caribbean for the Caribbean coast. This decision was made after residents and environmental groups complained about the 'development's' ecological impact.

The rejection of this mega-tourism project reflects the growing opposition to mass development on Mexico's unspoiled coastal regions.

Barcena said at a press event that "it is not going be approved". The company had also taken steps to withdraw this project.

Royal Caribbean said it regretted its decision, but respected Mexico's environmental authorities.

The company said it is still optimistic about its investment in Mexico, and will be talking to stakeholders about job creation in Mexico as well as environmental infrastructure in the coming weeks.

Perfect Day, an ambitious project that was slated to debut in Mahahual in the fall of 2027, a coastal town near a coral reef and beach, had been advertised as "the biggest, baddest boldest destination" with beach clubs, bars, pools, and more than 30 water slides.

Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexican president, echoed environmental concerns at her morning press conference on Monday.

Sheinbaum stated that "we must not do anything to affect that area. It has an important ecological balance and is especially important for the coral reefs."

ENVIRONMENTAL PUSHBACK

Mahahual is a small town of fewer than 3,00 people located in one of the most fragile and ecologically diverse regions in the Western Caribbean. The area is home to turtle nesting beaches and protected mangrove forests. It also has corridors which are habitats for Central American tapirs, jaguars and ocelots.

The Mesoamerican reef is the second largest barrier reef in the world.

Greenpeace, an environmental group, warned that the region was "at a crucial juncture" and that the project's link to expanded cruise tourism could have significant environmental effects.

Online, there was also a surge in public opposition. In recent days, a Change.org petition requesting the project's halt, which was launched in July 2025 has reached over 4 million signatures.

The petitioners claim that the proposed 90-hectare water park (222-acres) would be built over protected mangroves and threaten the local way-of-life, the community's access to the beaches, as well as the survival of marine life.

The area is near the route for the?Mayan Train. This government project was designed to help Indigenous Maya Communities beyond the crowded Cancun beaches, but local groups and environmentalists criticized it. (Reporting and Writing by Daina Beth Sola, Editing by Brendan O'Boyle & Cynthia Osterman).

(source: Reuters)