Date: 31 January 2013
Cruise industry tops 20m clients, focuses on Asia.
NEW YORK - Cruise lines carried 20.3 million passengers last
year and expect the numbers to rise in 2013 as more companies focus resources
on luring Asian clients, industry experts said on Wednesday. A year after the
Costa Concordia disaster off the coast of Italy with the loss of 32 lives, the
Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA), which represents cruise lines
around the globe, said it expects to reach 20.97 million passengers this year.
"The industry is well positioned to continue with this
trajectory," Christine Duffy, CLIA's president and CEO, told a news
conference, adding that new policies have been introduced following a review
after the accident.
The Caribbean, Mediterranean and Europe remain the top cruise
destinations, with Americans and Canadians making up the bulk of passengers,
but the industry is rapidly going global with Australia and Asia the big growth
area. "We are very bullish on China and Asia as a whole," said Jim
Berra, chief marketing officer of Carnival Cruise Lines and CLIA's marketing
chair.
He added that cruise lines are investing in the region with
more home ports and ports of call, and sending ships into the region to meet
the growing market. "By 2020 the Chinese market is projected to be a US$7
trillion(S$9 trillion) consumer economy and will have created the largest
middle class that ever existed on Earth," he said.
Cruise lines, as a result, will be adding itineraries to
Japan, China and Australia, South Korea and Vietnam. "Some of our newer,
bigger ships are heading to these markets because the demand is there," Mr
Berra added.
Along with Asian destinations, cruise lines are adding trips
to exotic locales such as Morocco, Antarctica, Iceland and the Galapagos
Islands, and are ramping up on-board entertainment with Broadway shows and
appearances of Tony-award winning actors and reality show stars, he said.
A CLIA poll of travel agents who book cruises showed that
multigenerational travel, weddings and honeymoons are seen as the top potential
growth groups for cruises. "It's all about innovation, global markets and
how you open up to them," said Mr Berra.
By Reuters
Copyright @ 2013 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd
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