Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

CRUISES ARE BACK

May not see pre-pandemic passenger numbers until 2023

- By Anna Jean Kaiser

MIAMI — The cruise industry may not return to prepandemi­c passenger numbers until 2023, according to an industry consultant speaking at Seatrade, the world’s largest business-to-business cruise conference which took place in Miami Beach last week.

“It’s all very encouragin­g, but I don’t really see until next year that we’ll get significan­t increases [in passengers],” said David Selby, the owner of Travelyiel­ds Ltd., a consulting firm that specialize­s in cruises, speaking at the conference via video call from the U.K. “I don’t see us getting back to 2019 levels until 2023, or possibly longer,” he said, adding that, “only time will tell.”

“All depends on if, heaven forbid, there are new variants,” he warned.

Mr. Selby presented numbers showing the cruise industry consistent­ly growing in number of passengers in the years before the pandemic. The industry saw 28.5 million passengers worldwide in 2018 and 29.7 million in 2019, but dropped off to 5.8 million in 2020, an 81% decrease. Before COVID-19, Mr. Selby’s Travelyiel­ds had predicted 32 million global cruise passengers in 2020, a 6.7% increase.

Miami’s cruise operators suspended voyages on March 13, 2020, as the coronaviru­s pandemic was rapidly spreading throughout the world. The country’s first cruise since then left from Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale on June 28, 2021. The industry has slowly restarted at reduced capacity and with COVID19 mitigation protocols.

Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n, which collects data on global passenger numbers, hasn’t yet released data for 2021.

The Seatrade conference saw 11,000 registered attendees in 2019. The conference’s first day over two years later had fewer than 100 in-person attendees in a midsize room in the 1.4 millionsqu­are- foot Miami Beach Convention Center. While industry leaders repeatedly told in-person and virtual attendees that cruising was back, speakers like Mr. Selby emphasized that the industry’s return will likely be slow and complicate­d.

“The steady return beckons, but it will return,” Mr. Selby said. “It’s been a slow and painful reintroduc­tion.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Cruise operators in Miami suspended voyages on March 13, 2020, as the coronaviru­s pandemic was rapidly spreading. They did not resume until June 28 of this year.
Associated Press Cruise operators in Miami suspended voyages on March 13, 2020, as the coronaviru­s pandemic was rapidly spreading. They did not resume until June 28 of this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States