With the Average Cost of 1500 GBP Per Person, Only 6% of UK Households Take a Cruise as Their Holiday Option.DUBLIN, Ireland -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c31285) has announced the addition of The Cruise Market - Market Assessment 2005 to their offering In the early 2000s, the number of cruise passengers worldwide grew by between 8% and 9% a year. Growth in 2005 is expected to be lower due to a shortage of capacity and the beginnings of a squeeze on personal incomes, especially in the UK and Germany. In the longer term, South East Asia East Asia A region of Asia coextensive with the Far East. East Asian adj. & n. has enormous potential for the development of cruise holidays. Cruise trends in the UK include a rise in the popularity of mass-market cruise holidays lasting a week or more, a fall in demand for premium-cost cruises and an increase in budget cruising. Cruises account for around 6% of UK households' spending on package holidays. Generally, only households in the highest income can afford a cruise costing more than around GBP GBP In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the British Pound. Notes: The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion. 1,500 per person from their income. The cruise sector should benefit from the ageing population in the UK, provided that sufficient pensioners have high enough incomes to afford cruise holidays. This should be the case in the short and medium terms, but the long-term prospects for pensioners' incomes are not so rosy ros·y adj. ros·i·er, ros·i·est 1. a. Having the characteristic pink or red color of a rose. b. Flushed with a healthy glow: rosy cheeks. 2. . The international cruise liner liner /lin·er/ (lin´er) material applied to the inside of the walls of a cavity or container for protection or insulation of the surface. liner see teat cup liner. fleet numbers around 340 in 2005. The cruise industry is controlled from the US, primarily the state of Florida. The leading operators are Carnival Corporation and Royal Caribbean, with Star Cruises Star Cruises is the third-largest cruise line in the world behind Carnival Corporation and Royal Caribbean, and dominates the Asia-Pacific market. It also owns the Norwegian Cruise Line, NCL America, Orient Lines and Cruise Ferries brands with a total combined fleet of 22 ships of Malaysia a somewhat distant third. The major lines are going for economies of scale and building super liners, some of which carry more than 3,000 passengers. Huge liners have a limited choice of destinations because of their size and are primarily floating resorts, but lines with large ships can cope much better than lines running small ships with the discounting needed to fill unsold berths before departure. Scope for new entrants to cruising is limited, except in specialist niches, such as golf or garden cruises. Pollution from large cruise ships This is a list of cruise ships, both those in service and those that have since ceased to operate. Both cruise ships and cruiseferries are included in this list. (Ocean liners are not included on this list, see List of ocean liners. is a growing problem. Most cruise ships are registered under flags of convenience, enabling operators to reduce their costs by bypassing the strict regulation applying to UK-registered shipping, for example. More than 40% of liners carrying 1,000 or more passengers are registered in the Bahamas and another 17% are registered in Panama. Cruise lines
Name Headquarters A'rosa Europe NCL America America AIDA Cruises Europe American Cruise Lines America are beginning to consider how to reduce the environmental impact of their ships. Gas and steam turbines Steam turbine A machine for generating mechanical power in rotary motion from the energy of steam at temperature and pressure above that of an available sink. By far the most widely used and most powerful turbines are those driven by steam. to replace diesel engines are a promising step. Rising oil prices will put pressure on margins, especially in Europe, where there is little scope to put up ticket prices. Mass-market lines will not be able to raise ticket prices appreciably ap·pre·cia·ble adj. Possible to estimate, measure, or perceive: appreciable changes in temperature. See Synonyms at perceptible. , although at the top end, the charter and small-ship cruises catering for wealthy travellers should prosper, particularly if they can cut promotion costs by relying on repeat custom. Commodification Commodification (or commoditization) is the transformation of what is normally a non-commodity into a commodity, or, in other words, to assign value. As the word commodity has distinct meanings in business and in Marxist theory, commodification of the cruise experience is a potential problem for the lines reliant on very large ships. The South East Asian market should grow massively in the long term but, in the years to 2010, the US market will become even more dominant than it is in 2005. Constraints on future growth include capacity rising by less than 5% a year, weather problems, security threats and oil prices. Topics Covered Executive Summary 1. Introduction 2. Strategic Overview 3. Demographics and the UK's Cruise Business 4. Economics, Incomes and the Demand for Cruising in the UK 5. Cruising and the Environment: Limits to Expansion 6. Promotion 7. An International Perspective 8. PEST Analysis 9. Consumer Dynamics 10. Company Profiles 11. The Future 12. Consumer Confidence 13. Further Sources Companies Mentioned --Carnival Corporation --Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd --Star Cruises --Crystal Cruises --Peter Deilmann --Disney Cruise Line A cruise line is a company that operates cruise ships. Cruise lines have a dual character; they are partly in the transportation business, and partly in the leisure entertainment business, a duality that carries down into the ships themselves, which have both a crew headed by the --easyCruise --Hebridean Cruises --Louis Cruise Lines --MSC Cruises --Orient-Express Hotels Ltd --Radisson Seven Seas Cruises --Silversea Cruises --Zegrahm and Eco Expeditions For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c31285 |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion