The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Singapore has one-third of global cruise travellers

- Faris Mokhtar

SINGAPORE now accounts for one-third of global cruise travellers, a testament to the nation’s ability to contain the coronaviru­s and resume operations at a time when many other countries are still struggling.

The city-state, which contains a population of 5.7 million on an island smaller than New York City, was able to achieve what it has because of its robust health safety framework, Singapore Tourism Board Chief Executive Officer Keith Tan said at a conference recently.

Singapore began offering socalled cruises to nowhere last year after authoritie­s introduced a CruiseSafe certificat­ion, which all operators have to obtain before they set sail. It spells out standards companies must achieve, including mandatory coronaviru­s testing before boarding, ensuring safe distancing and frequent cleaning and sanitising.

To date, more than 120,000 residents of Singapore have taken a cruise — many multiple times. Because of the overwhelmi­ng demand, heightened by the fact internatio­nal travel remains largely off limits, the cruises have been extended until October.

Two operators are offering the trips, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. and Genting Cruise Lines.

People said they felt safer going on a cruise than going to some places in Singapore “because everyone is tested before they go on the cruise,” Tan said. “So having that framework of assurance has been a major cornerston­e of our success.”

Singapore has done a stellar job getting the spread of the coronaviru­s under control. The country also plans to vaccinate its entire population by the end of the year.

While the vaccine roll out in the UK and the US is also progressin­g well, virus cases are still surging in Europe and parts of South America. The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention in the US said cruise operations could start by midsummer after the country’s largest operator, Carnival Corp, threatened to relocate ships to other markets.

However Tan downplayed Singapore’s dominance, noting that cruising in most other places of the world is yet to restart, hurting an industry that was worth US$150 billion in 2018.

“Let me just say this in context — one-third of global cruise throughput in a time when virtually all other cruise destinatio­ns and cruise ports have stopped or are not moving at all is nothing to crow about,” Tan said.

“Over the next few months, I certainly believe there will be more resumption of cruise business in the Caribbean, and in the Mediterran­ean as well.” — Bloomberg

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