The Mercury

Uncertain future for cruise ships

Pandemic could spell the end of the line for industry

- FREYA HIGGINS-DESBIOLLES | The Conversati­on Higgins-Desbiolles is a senior lecturer in tourism management, University of South Australia.

STRANDED cruise ships have become a symbol of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Passengers and crew are desperate to get off but the ports to which they’ve headed don’t want them.

It is no exaggerati­on to suggest this crisis could spell the end of the line for a industry already on the nose for its social, health and environmen­tal problems.

Indeed, the same business model at the root of those problems is the cause of its current crisis, in which ship operators have been accused of gross or even criminal negligence.

That model has to do with flags of convenienc­e. This means ships operate in waters far from their “home” ports. Most are registered in Caribbean tax havens. Operating outside clear jurisdicti­ons, wages are low and working conditions poor.

That so many ships have become floating coronaviru­s incubators also indicates poor health and safety protocols. An emergency plan for an infectious outbreak on a ship seems an obvious thing to have. Yet reports suggest improvised responses.

Now, with ports and entire nations ordering cruise ships away, flags of convenienc­e have become an existentia­l threat to crew, and the industry.

The industry’s reputation­al crisis is demonstrat­ed no better than in Australia, where 24 of the nation’s 61 confirmed Covid-19 deaths so far have come from cruise ships.

All 20 cruise ships still in Australian waters were ordered to leave last week, with Australian Border Force commission­er Michael Outram citing concerns the number of cases among crew would be “a big strain on the Australian health system”.

Just one ship, the Ruby Princess, is linked to 18 deaths (and about 700 infections – roughly 10% of Australia’s total cases).

Deaths have also come from the Artania, Voyager of the Seas, Celebrity Solistice and Ovation of the Seas.

The Ruby Princess was allowed to dock in Sydney on March 19. About 2 700 passengers disembarke­d without being tested, because New South Wales authoritie­s believed there was low risk.

Police are now investigat­ing possible criminal charges against the operator, Princess Cruises, for misleading authoritie­s about the situation. (The ship has since been allowed to dock at Port Kembla, south of Sydney, with a fifth of more than 1 000 crew quarantine­d aboard showing virus-like symptoms).

There are also calls for a criminal negligence investigat­ion of the operator of the Artania, in a weeks-long stand-off in Western Australian waters.

Most of the ship’s passengers were allowed to disembark and get charter flights home to Europe. But more than 400 people, mostly crew, remain on board, and the state government fears the number of coronaviru­s cases would overwhelm local hospitals.

“We’d like you to leave, we don’t want you in our port,” said West Australia’s premier Mark McGowan.

But where are they, and tens of thousands of crew workers on hundreds of other cruise ships around the world, to go?

Consider the Artania. The ship is owned by British cruise line P&O, chartered to a German company, operates out of Frankfurt and is registered in the Bahamas.

The Ruby Princess operates out of Australia but is registered in Bermuda. Its owner, Princess Cruises, is headquarte­red in California but also incorporat­ed in Bermuda.

Most cruise ships are registered in a country different to ownership or operation.

More than two-thirds (by tonnage) fly the flags of just three nations – the Bahamas, Panama and Bermuda.

Flags of convenienc­e make the cruise ship industry one of the world’s least regulated, with owners and operators able to skirt more stringent workplace, health, safety and environmen­tal rules.

For crew, particular­ly those in “lower level” service jobs, pay and conditions are poor. Many accept such conditions to earn money for their families.

Hidden from view, even passengers can be oblivious to their conditions.

Both P&O and Princess Cruises are subsidiari­es of the world’s biggest cruise company, Carnival Corporatio­n, whose combined fleet of about 300 ships carries almost half the world’s cruising passengers

Carnival Corporatio­n is headquarte­red in Miami, as are the second- and third-biggest cruise corporatio­ns, Royal Caribbean and Norwegian. But Carnival is incorporat­ed in Panama, Norwegian in Bermuda, and Royal Caribbean in Liberia.

Now these “incorporat­ions of convenienc­e” threaten their survival. Their revenue has been cut to zero. The US government is offering no assistance because they’re foreign companies and their employees are spread across the world. Other government­s are unlikely to do more.

Industry analysts say the big cruise operators have enough reserves to last six months. After that, if they don’t secure funding, they face going out of business.

If that happens, many will not mourn the loss. The cruise ship industry was on the nose for its social and environmen­t problems.

It has contribute­d to over-tourism in places like Barcelona, Reykjavik, Dubrovnik and Venice. Its environmen­tal record is appalling. Just last year Carnival paid $20 million (R366m) to settle a US court case over it allowing its ships to dump rubbish in the ocean – something for which it has a previous criminal conviction.

Now the industry’s carefully honed image of cruise ships offering the right balance between fun and security looks to have sunk.

Whatever remains after this crisis will need a complete overhaul.

That so many ships have become virus incubators indicates poor health and safety protocols

 ?? | AAP Image via AP ?? CRUISE liner Artenia docked at Fremantle Harbour in Western Australia on March 27. Twenty-four of Australia’s 61 coronaviru­s deaths have come from cruise ships.
| AAP Image via AP CRUISE liner Artenia docked at Fremantle Harbour in Western Australia on March 27. Twenty-four of Australia’s 61 coronaviru­s deaths have come from cruise ships.

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