Chapter 2 Cruise tourism
2.1
Cruising is becoming ever-more popular for Australian tourists, with
consistent growth in passenger numbers year after year. In 2011 the number of
passengers grew by 34 per cent, and in 2012 they grew by an additional 11 per
cent. This trend has been sustained over the past decade: with nearly 700 000
passengers in 2012, Australian cruising is now almost six times the size it was
in 2002.
2.2
Remarkably, the Australian cruising industry has now had eight
consecutive years of double-digit growth,[1] and growth is expected to
continue. Carnival Australia, a subsidiary of the world’s largest cruising
company, states that it ‘is focussed on seeing more than one million
Australians take a cruise holiday by 2020.’[2]
2.3
The global industry has also seen healthy growth over the past decade,
with an almost doubling of total passenger numbers between 2002 and 2012.[3]
Global cruising operators are very active in Australia, and Australia is one of
the two fastest growing cruising markets in the world. It can be expected that
such growth will attract further attention from the global industry,
potentially expanding the number of cruising operators in the Australian
market.
2.4
Whilst the growth of the industry is well documented, there remains
relatively little information about the rate of crimes at sea. The industry
prides itself on its image as a safe way to holiday, claiming that it is safer
to be on a cruise than to be in a small city let alone a large one.[4]
However, there is a lack of sufficient data to substantiate this claim.
2.5
This Chapter will consider the Australian and global cruising
industries, including the demographics of cruising passengers, and will discuss
the available data about crimes committed at sea.
Box
1 – the death of Dianne Brimble
Cruising industry – an overview
2.6
The global cruising industry is estimated to be worth US$36.2 billion in
2013, with growth of 4.5 per cent over the previous year. There were almost 21
million cruising passengers worldwide in 2012, and two companies dominate the
industry.[5]
2.7
The biggest player, Carnival Corporation & PLC (the parent of
Carnival Australia and Holland America) has had (to date) almost 50 per cent of
total world-wide passengers in 2013.[6] Carnival owns many
well-known brands, such as P&O Cruises, Cunard, Princess Cruises, Costa and
Carnival Cruise Lines.[7] Carnival’s total revenue
in 2012 was US$15.2 billion.
2.8
The next largest operator is Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, which has had
just over 23 per cent of total world-wide passengers in 2013.[8]
Royal Caribbean has six brands, including Royal Caribbean International and
Celebrity Cruises.[9] Royal Caribbean’s 2012
revenue was US$7.7 billion.
2.9
The remaining 28 per cent of the market is shared by over 30 smaller
companies, of which the largest accounts for roughly 7 per cent of total
passengers.[10]
2.10
The cruising industry is acutely sensitive to customer perceptions and
concerns, particularly relating to health and safety. As noted by the Bureau of
Transport and Regional Economics:
Australia’s international cruise shipping market grew
strongly until 2000-01 … and then it declined sharply in 2001-02 and 2002-03,
largely as a result of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the USA and the
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic in Asia.[11]
A considerable reduction in passenger
numbers occurred in these two years:
The total (both inbound and outbound) number of international
sea passengers increased by an average annual rate of 17.9 per cent a year
during 1993-94 to 2000-01 and then declined by 32.5 per cent in 2001-02 and
36.7 per cent in 2002-03.[12]
Whilst the number of passengers
subsequently returned to, and surpassed the levels before that period, it
remains an important demonstration of the susceptibility of the cruising
industry to customer perceptions about health and safety.
2.11
A more recent example is that of the Costa Concordia grounding
and sinking, which had immediate implications for Carnival Corporation, the
ship’s operator. As stated in a Carnival Corporation media release:
Since the date of the Costa Concordia incident in
mid-January through February 26 [2012], fleetwide booking volumes, excluding
Costa, have shown improving trends but are still running high single digits
behind the prior year at slightly lower prices. There has been less impact on
the company’s North American brands than European brands. Booking volumes for
Costa during the same period are running significantly behind the prior year at
lower prices, however, Costa has curtailed virtually all of its marketing
activities during this period.[13]
The Australian cruising market
2.12
Australia represents 3.4 per cent of the global cruise market, and
Carnival Australia has the majority of cruising business in the Australian
market.[14] Royal Caribbean has a
smaller presence in Australia, but in 2012 expressed its intention that:
In 2013, we will continue to focus on the development of key
markets in Asia and we will focus on sourcing guests and adding capacity to
other markets where we expect significant growth and profitability, such as
Australia.[15]
2.13
The Australian cruising market is the amongst the healthiest in the
world, measured in a number of different ways:
n Market penetration –
3% of Australians went on a cruise in 2012, which is second only to the USA, in
which 3.3% of the national population went on a cruise;
n Growth in numbers –
the Australian market grew by 11% in 2012, the highest rate of growth, equalled
only by Germany;
n Continued growth – as
noted above, the Australian market has grown by at least 10% for eight years in
a row; and
n Annual average growth
– the average yearly growth of the market, over the past decade, is 20%.[16]
2.14
Cruising is also performing very well in comparison with other
Australian tourism sectors:
The Australian cruise sector has undergone strong growth in
the last five years. This growth has taken place against a backdrop of
stagnation in the wider tourism sector (as measured in total visitor nights).
International tourism to Australia, while having grown in visitor nights, has
been affected in recent times by the exchange rate through lower yields. Likewise,
the domestic tourism sector has struggled as the exchange rate has made
overseas travel relatively more affordable for Australian travellers.[17]
2.15
Research commissioned by Carnival Australia has estimated the
contribution of cruising to the Australian economy, finding that in
2010-11, ‘the cruise sector contributed almost $830 million in value added to
the Australian economy.’[18] The report also forecasted
that, by 2020, the industry would contribute $2.28 billion to the Australian
economy, and that by 2020, ‘the cruise tourism contribution as a proportion of
Australian GDP is expected to double to 0.12%, from 0.06% in 2010-11.’[19]
2.16
The vast bulk of passengers who depart on cruises from Australian ports
are Australians, at 86%. The remaining 14% are foreign tourists who fly to
Australia and then board cruises. Whilst many Australians board cruises in
Australian ports, Australians are also increasingly flying to other countries
and then going on cruises.[20]
Box 2 – the disappearance of Paul Rossington and Kristen
Schroder
Cruising demographics
2.17
Of Australian cruising passengers, most come from New South Wales and
Queensland, although the Australian Capital Territory has the highest
percentage of residents cruising (at 5.5%).[21] Most Australian cruising
passengers depart from Australian ports, with departures available from all
mainland state capitals.[22]
2.18
The popularity of cruising differs according to age group. In 2012,
one-third of Australian passengers were aged 61 years and over. The full range
of age groups is as follows:
n Under 40 25%
n 41 – 45 14%
n 46 – 50
8%
n 51 – 55
9%
n 56 – 60
11%
n 61 – 65
11%
n 66 – 70
10%
n Over 70
12%
2.19
Cruise Lines International Association notes that, with 25% of
passengers under the age of 40, cruising is popular amongst families.[23]
Carnival Australia has attempted to make its cruises more appealing to
families, and has banned so-called ‘schoolies cruises’. It has applied for and
received an exemption from the Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission
for this ban. Additional steps have been taken to make cruises more
family-oriented:
n The marketing
emphasis has shifted to promote cruising as a relaxed family holiday for all
age groups;
n The former 'party
ship' focus has been eliminated;
n Former practice of
permitting quad cabins to be shared by unrelated passengers has been stopped.[24]
Further discussion of schoolies cruises
is in Chapter 4.
Foreign involvement in the Australian market
2.20
The Australian cruise market is growing very quickly, and Australians
are increasingly going cruising. However, in contrast to many passengers’
expectations, the industry is largely regulated beyond Australia.
2.21
Whilst Carnival Australia is an Australian company, its parent company
is based in Florida and the United Kingdom (UK); Royal Caribbean Cruises
Australia operates out of Sydney, however Royal Caribbean International is also
based in Florida.
2.22
As noted by the Government Response, there are currently no ‘large
passenger vessels’ registered (or ‘flagged’) in Australia.[25]
In many circumstances, the law of the ‘flag-state’ will apply on-board a
vessel, even when it is in the waters of another country. The legal reasons for
this will be discussed in Chapter 3, as this has significant consequences for
the extent of Australian jurisdiction over what happens on cruising vessels in
Australian ports or with Australian passengers.
2.23
Despite Carnival and Royal Caribbean being American and UK companies,
their vessels are often registered outside those countries. For example, there
is only one cruise ship registered in the United States of America (USA),
despite being the largest cruising market.[26]
2.24
Many cruising vessels are not flagged in the countries of their owners,
and are rather registered in countries that offer attractive conditions and
light regulation of shipping. Often said to be ‘flags of convenience’, these countries
have registries far bigger than their national shipping would fill. Many of
these countries rely on the registration fees of the vessels for revenue. The
International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITWF) maintains a list of
countries it considers to be ‘flag of convenience countries’, which includes
some of the countries with high numbers of cruise ship registrations, such as
Bermuda, the Bahamas and Panama.[27]
2.25
Reliable statistics for the entire industry are hard to come by, but in
2000, ‘90 of the world’s 223 cruise ships were registered in Panama or
Liberia.’[28]
2.26
Given this lack of information, the Committee asked both Carnival
Australia and Royal Caribbean Cruises to provide details of the flagging of
their vessels that are expected to visit Australia in future. Carnival
Australia provided a table of ships in the group ‘that are booked to visit
Australia until 2019’. Of the 24 ships listed, thirteen are flagged in ‘flags
of convenience’ states (they appear on the ITWF list). These states are
Bermuda, Panama, Malta and the Bahamas.[29] Royal Caribbean Cruises
provided details of ships in its ‘published cruise programs through to April
2015’, of which there are six. All six ships are flagged in states that the
ITWF considers ‘flags of convenience’ states, being the Bahamas and Malta.[30]
The details of these ships are published at Appendix I.
Crimes on cruises
2.27
Cruise ships can accommodate thousands of people, and the largest cruise
ship can carry a maximum of 6 296 passengers and 2 394 crew members.[31]
As noted by numerous submissions, this amounts to the population of a small
town, in which there will always be a certain level of crime. As pointed out by
the International Cruise Victims Association:
Crime on a cruise ship is no less an undeniable reality than
it is for any rural town or metropolitan city. After all, cruise ships, which
now have the capability to embark over 6000 passenger and over 2000 crew
members, are small floating cities. It is unrealistic to believe that even in
the enclosed environment of a cruise ship that criminal activity stops at the
gangway; especially since the ship does not have a police force.[32]
2.28
As for the actual level of crime on cruise ships, Carnival Australia stated
that ‘the rate of alleged crime on cruise ships is significantly less than that
of the general community.’[33] Dr Kate Lewins, in
evidence that was supported by Carnival Australia[34],
suggested that:
With such a concentrated population, one might expect that
cruise ships would suffer the same rate of crime per head of population as a
town of equivalent size. However, industry statistics show that the rate of
crime on cruise ships is very low indeed, even pegging the likelihood of being
the victim of crime on a cruise ship as being the same as the risk of being hit
by lightning.[35]
2.29
Whilst there is clearly a belief that crimes on cruise ships are rare –
and the rate of crime lower than in the general community – there are also
factors on cruise ships that would tend to increase the probability of crimes.
As also pointed out by Dr Lewins:
… the population aboard [a cruise ship] is transient.
Passengers include vulnerable people such as children, the disabled and the
elderly. Alcohol flows freely and inhibitions can be low. Multiply these risk
factors across the current fleet of approximately 200 cruise ships sailing
internationally and it is impressive that crimes on board cruise ships are not
more prevalent.[36]
2.30
In respect of sexual assault, for example, Holiday Travel Watch
suggested that:
There is a general acknowledgement that vulnerability will
arise and that the propensity for sexual attacks will increase when the victim
has been drinking (or taken drugs).
There is also a general assumption that persons relaxing on
board a ship are more likely to "let their guard down" and to perhaps
drink more than if not on holiday.
It is therefore a possibility that this combination makes
persons easy targets for offences to be committed against them…[37]
2.31
Beyond this generalised picture, however, there is a lack of
comprehensive and independent data about the prevalence of crimes on cruise
ships. It must also be remembered that not all victims will report a crime[38],
and so the level of criminality is likely higher than any official reporting
suggests.
2.32
Chapter 4 considers the responsibility of cruising operators to report
crimes and alleged crimes to law enforcement authorities.
2.33
In the following two sections, crime statistics for Australia and the
USA are considered. While statistics from the USA are more comprehensive, they
can only provide a general indication of what complete Australian crime
statistics might be, if available.
Australian crime statistics
2.34
The Committee sought to obtain the best available statistics on crimes
committed against Australians at sea. Such data, inasmuch as it is available,
tends to be collected by law enforcement agencies. However, evidence tended to
emphasise the undifferentiated nature of any such statistics. For example, the
South Australian Police submitted that:
While [South Australian Police] data management systems do
not enable crimes at sea to be readily identified it is believed that SAPOL's
involvement in such matter, should it have occurred, would be limited to
death/s through illness or violence between crew members. The Criminal
Investigation Branch (CIB) with overall responsibility for managing the
response advise that there have been no incidents reported to SAPOL in recent
years of offending within coastal waters or Territorial Sea where SAPOL was
required to respond.[39]
2.35
The New South Wales Police Force (NSWPF) also indicated that its data is
relatively unsophisticated, though it does enable the identification of broad
trends:
The NSWPF have identified an estimated 91% increase in Cruise
ship visitation and 11% increase in international freight into NSW ports
between 2008 and 2012. However, NSWPF records indicate that there has been no
marked increase in reported crime during the same period.[40]
2.36
Evidence suggested that there are no reliable, national statistics on
crimes committed against Australians at sea. As described by Commander Errol
Raiser (Australian Federal Police) there are a number of potential collectors
and holders of data, without any clear national reporting process:
We potentially would have data not held by the states and
territories. I think I mentioned earlier that we may receive a referral from [the
Australian Maritime Safety Authority] that may not go to the states and
territories. There is, as far as I am aware, no centralised consolidated
recording of all crime types. It is appropriate that I mention whaling. In the
Federal Police, my area, we look after whaling. I do not think any of the
jurisdictions would have any record of that type, and yet we would argue that
that certainly falls within the bailiwick of crimes at sea, albeit not to your
questions around the safety of passengers. So, equally, the risk with
collecting that type of data is that you create as many questions as you might
answer.[41]
2.37
The South Australian Commissioner for Victims’ Rights noted the
difficulty of accessing statistics on crimes committed at sea:
Unfortunately, I was unable to attain local and national
crime statistics pertaining to crimes at sea. The South Australia Police record
crime on vessels and ships but it is not readily evident which of those crimes
happened on, for instance, a cruise ship docked in local waters. Approximately
50 to 100 crimes that happened on either a vessel or ship each year for the
past three years are known to the police in South Australia. Notwithstanding
the lack of data[,] information gleaned from international sources show violent
and property crimes [can] happen on ships; indeed, … such crimes cover much of
the array of offences in Australia’s criminal laws.[42]
2.38
The Attorney-General’s Department provided information about Australian
involvement in the prosecutions of crimes that occurred beyond 12 nautical
miles from the Australian coast. For such Australian prosecutions (under the Crimes
at Sea Act 2000) the Federal Attorney-General must give consent, and this
is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 3. The Department provided a table
containing the ‘outcomes of all prosecutions that have proceeded following
consent being issued by the Attorney-General under the Crimes at Sea Act’,
which included 8 prosecutions between 2001 and 2013.[43]
The crimes prosecuted included manslaughter, murder, assault, theft, indecent
acts and theft.
2.39
In contrast to the Australian picture, statistics relating to US
citizens are somewhat more complete, as discussed below.
US crime statistics
2.40
There are more comprehensive sources of crime statistics relating to the
USA, particularly through the work of criminologists. This has been
supplemented by the reporting requirements of the Kerry Act, which is
also discussed below.
2.41
Dr James Fox, Professor of Criminology at Northeastern University in
Boston, USA, has compared the number of crimes on board ships that embark from
or disembark to US ports that were reported to the FBI (Federal Bureau of
Investigation, USA) and subsequently no longer under FBI investigation with the
number of similar crimes cleared by ‘arrest or exceptional means’ in selected
US cities of various size.[44]
2.42
According to Dr Fox, the rate of crime overall on cruise ships is lower
than that of most US cities.[45] The average rate of
sexual assaults on cruise ships does, however, exceed the comparable rate of
some US cities.[46] The rate of sexual
assault differs among cruise lines, with Holland America and Disney Cruise
Line’s rates higher than the US averages.[47]
2.43
Dr Ross Klein, Professor of Social Work at the Memorial University of
Newfoundland, Canada, told a US Senate Committee hearing in 2008 that:
The integrity of [industry] data is unclear (e.g., what
definitions were used to include/exclude incidents) given that it has not been
available for independent analysis and verification.[48]
2.44
Dr Klein notes that Royal Caribbean International was required to
disclose data on sex-related incidents during a lawsuit. The data demonstrated
that the rate of sexual assault on Royal Caribbean cruise ships between 2003
and 2005 was almost twice that of the US land rate.[49]
2.45
Dr Klein and Dr Jill Poulston obtained FBI data of crimes reported by
cruise ships in 2007-2008 through a Freedom of Information request.[50]
It showed that one cruising line reported 92 sex-related incidents, or 115 per
100 000, during that period, which averaged to four incidents per ship.[51]
According to the authors, comparable statistics do not exist for the USA, but
in the case of Canada, the rate of sex-related incidents reported in 2007 was
68 per 100 000.[52]
2.46
Since the Kerry Act was passed in the US in 2010, all incidents
on US-owned vessels or in US territorial waters and all incidents involving US
citizens on the high seas or on a vessel that departed from or will arrive at a
US port, must be reported to the FBI.[53] The Kerry Act also
requires that these reports be collated and made publicly available on a
website on a quarterly basis.[54]
2.47
However, shortly before the legislation was enacted, an amendment was
made that limited the information required to be released.[55]
Only reported crimes that have been under FBI investigation and subsequently
closed are published.[56] This means that alleged
crimes that the FBI does not investigate, has not finished investigating, or
are investigated by another jurisdiction (such as state police) are not
recorded on the website.
Committee Comment
2.48
The cruising industry continues to grow around the world. Despite events
that can dampen demand – such as the SARS outbreak and the global financial
crisis – cruising is now twice the size it was a decade ago.
2.49
Cruising in Australia has grown with even more speed than the rest of
the world: there are now five times as many Australians cruising as there were
in 2002. The growth of the Australian market continues to be very strong, with
eight years of growth above 10%. Companies that operate in the Australian
market are benefiting from very high consumer demand, and foresee continued
growth with the expectation of 1 million annual passengers by the end of the
decade.
2.50
Now is a particularly appropriate time for a review of the industry and
Australian regulation of cruising: the industry is strong, healthy and
continues to grow. Additionally, there have never been so many Australian
citizens taking cruises, and so it is appropriate for the Australian Government
to consider how it might better protect Australians who take cruises.
2.51
However, there are impediments to Australian regulation of this
industry. The cruise companies that carry most Australian passengers are based
in other countries, and none of the vessels are registered in Australia.
2.52
Further complicating policy in this area, there is a serious deficit of
data about the prevalence of crimes committed at sea. Governments have limited
information to inform action; short of the occasional tragedy reported in the
media, Australian consumers do not have a source of information about the
safety of cruising. The cruising industry may well advance its genuine belief
that crimes at sea are rare, but there is no independent source of data to inform
government policy or prove the rarity of crimes to consumers.
2.53
In the absence of data, widely-reported tragedies will remain a central
source of safety information for consumers who are considering taking a cruise
– however misleading this may be. To enable cruising operators to prove their
claims about the safety of cruising, and for consumers to have access to
accurate information, the compilation of data and statistics for crimes
committed at sea is essential
2.54
To this end, the Committee recommends that the Australian Institute of Criminology
compile and maintain statistics on crimes committed at sea by or against
Australians. This work should be coordinated with police agencies and the
mandatory reporting scheme recommended in Chapter 4.
Recommendation 1 |
2.55 |
The Committee recommends that the Australian Institute of
Criminology should compile, maintain and publish statistics on crimes
committed at sea by or against Australians. |