08 December 2008
SHANGHAI - The long-awaited Asia Cruise Association (ACA) was ratified by the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Costa Crociere spa, MSC, Silversea Cruises and Star Cruises during the inaugural Seatrade All Asia Cruise Convention.
Facilitated by the Singapore Tourism Board (STB), the association has been more than 10 years in the making.
Steve Odell, Silverseaââ¬â¢s VP Asia Pacific, emphasised that while there are existing cruise association models in North America, Europe and Australia, what made the ACA different was its sheer scope.
ââ¬ÅâWe are also involving a lot of other parties, too, other than the lines themselves.These will include the travel agent community, the agents, suppliers and virtually every sub-sector that contributes to the whole industry.ââ¬~
Michael Goh, SVP (Sales) of Star Cruises, described ACA as a ââ¬Åâcentral knowledge hub".
Seatradeââ¬â¢s managing director Christopher Hayman said, ââ¬ÅâAsia is on the threshold of major cruise expansion. These are exciting times and there are many more to come.ââ¬~
At the conventionââ¬â¢s keynote session more than 300 international and local delegates weighed the potential of Asia to become what chairman Lu Haihu of Shanghai International Port Group (SIPG) called, ââ¬ÅâThe next engine of the world cruise industry.ââ¬~
MSC Cruisesââ¬â¢ CEO, Pierfrancesco Vago, set the tone by describing Asia as ââ¬Åâthe last untouched frontier in cruising". He stressed: ââ¬ÅâMSC wants to be here.ââ¬~
Michael Bayley, SVP of Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, focusing on the Chinese market, said, ââ¬ÅâWe are already expanding our Shanghai operation and also opening offices in Beijing and Guangzhou within the next four years.ââ¬~
He expressed hope that the authorities and the lines can keep working together to create ââ¬Åâa seamless cruise experience.ââ¬~
SIPGââ¬â¢s Lu accepted that ââ¬Åâthe cruise market here is still in the developing stages. Since Asia is totally different, there are lots of issues we have to handle differently".
He joined cruise operators in encouraging the liberalisation of cabotage laws which meant the next stop for a ship leaving a Chinese terminal must be another country.
Senior Chinese government representatives attending the convention said the matter has been taken up directly with the Ministry of Communication.
UPDATED: Cruise ship search suspended leaving 16 passengers unaccounted for
UPDATED: Ferry sinks with 350 on board
Fat passengers should pay more, says ex Qantas finance chief
Amadeus crash hits thousands of travel agents and passengers
I tripped into the lifeboat, says Costa Captain
China bans its airlines from joining Emissions Trading Scheme
Only 11% of Brits book their holiday with high street agents
Costa makes compensation offer to passengers
Olympics will drive 12% of Brits overseas
Will Egypt's latest problems mean the end of it for 2012 as a tourism destination ?
Oil spill not stopping international travellers
International travelers so far are shrugging off impact of BP oil spill
You can book now your advertisement for via our online booking service or find out more.
Post your comment
Your Comments