Cruise lines add crime data to websites

Cruise lines add crime data to websites

By Tom Stieghorst
The biggest North American cruise lines on Thursday began posting quarterly reports about allegations of crime on their ships.

At a congressional hearing last week, Royal Caribbean International CEO Adam Goldstein said that Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., Carnival Corp. and Norwegian Cruise Line had all agreed to post the information.

The numbers will be different than those available currently on the U.S. Coast Guard site, which only count crime investigations that are considered closed by the FBI.

The numbers the cruise lines are voluntarily providing include all allegations of serious crime on their ships anywhere in the world.

Some in Congress have criticized the official statistics required by the Cruise Vessel Safety and Security Act of 2010 as under-representing the amount of crime on ships.

A bill introduced by Sen. Jay Rockefeller would require cruise lines to report all allegations of crime, regardless of whether they are investigated by the FBI or whether the cases have been closed.

Royal Caribbean is reporting its statistics in the Safety & Security tab of the Customer Service page on its website. Norwegian Cruise Line is reporting its crime stats under additional information at the bottom of its Safety & Security tab on its Corporate page.

Cruise market will see ‘modest growth’ in 2012, says PSA

Cruise market will see ‘modest growth’ in 2012, says PSA

Oct 04, 2011 06:00AM GMT

The growth in the number of British cruise passengers is to slow to just 1% next year, the Passenger Shipping Association has admitted.

This represents a slowdown from a projected increase of 5% this year and almost 6% in 2010.

Figures released at the Travel Convention in Palma show an estimated 1.73 million passengers will take a cruise holiday next year, a rise of just over 1% on this year’s forecast figure of 1.71 million passengers.

PSA director Bill Gibbons attributed the slowdown to fewer new ships entering service in 2012.

“Looking forward, we anticipate modest growth in 2012 as capacity slows following the reduction in the number of new ships being built,” he said.

“However, we remain confident that growth will continue over the coming years as companies introduce new ships including the 3,611 passenger vessel for P&O Cruises, the largest in their fleet, due for introduction in early 2015.

“The great choice of ships now providing cruise holidays from the UK to a wide variety of destinations will lead to more passengers sailing from British ports.”

The figures show that a record number of passengers are expected to depart on cruises from the UK in 2012 at 835,000, against 760,000 this year.

Gibbons added: “Cruising is expected to continue to outperform other areas of the holiday market with travel agents, who account for around 80% of sales, continuing to play an important role.”

The PSA expected seven new ships to enter service in 2012 for companies such as Carnival Cruises Lines, Celebrity Cruises, Costa Cruises, MSC Cruises, Disney Cruise Line and Oceania Cruises.

American Cruise Lines assigns ship to Alaska

American Cruise Lines assigns ship to Alaska

By Donna Tunney
ACL-AmericanSpiritAmerican Cruise Lines will deploy its 100-passenger American Spirit in Alaska next summer.

The line had announced in April that it planned to enter the Alaska market but hadn’t decided which ship would operate there.

The American Spirit, which was built in 2005, will offer seven- and 11-day itineraries, including roundtrip cruises departing from Juneau, and one-way cruises between Juneau and Seattle.