Cruise pause will strip the Aussie economy of $2 billion by year’s end: CLIA

Sinking Australian dollars

The economic impact of the cruise pause on the Australian economy has reached almost $2 billion, according to the Cruise Lines International Association (CLIA).

A new report commissioned by CLIA and the Australian Cruise Association (ACA) shows about $500 million was lost from March, when cruise ships stopped sailing, to July this year alone.

CLIA’s regional managing director, Joel Katz, said that by the end of December, this will have reached $2 billion given the ongoing pause in operations during the traditional summer peak cruise season.

He said the economy would take a further $3 billion hit if the cruise suspension continued into 2021.

“It is no secret the sector has been devastated by COVID-19, but the impact is also being felt by the many thousands of small businesses, especially in regional communities, that rely on a thriving cruise industry,” Katz said.

“This includes travel agents, fresh food suppliers, tour operators, hotels, bus companies, baggage handlers, Aussie entertainers, and the thousands of other businesses across the country which rely on the cruise industry.”

Last week, CLIA presented a set of newly proposed measures to the government seeking to begin a controlled resumption of domestic cruising in Australia with strict health protocols in place.

The measures are meant to support the government’s proposed end date to the cruise ban on 17 December.

“Australia’s success in stemming COVID-19 creates the opportunity for governments to confirm a pathway towards cruising’s revival – one that offers local cruises for locals only, while international borders remain closed, and supports an economic recovery,” Katz said.


Featured image source: iStock/fatido

Latest News

  • Partner Content

My journey: Before becoming a travel agent I was… a palliative care nurse 

Australind Travel & Cruise, Travellers Choice member Saibra Twigg reveals her life as paediatric nurse then to palliative care before a career leap to travel agent. How did you become a palliative care nurse?  ST I went straight from school in nursing and initially specialised in paediatrics, working at Perth’s Princess Margaret Hospital for Children. […]

Partner Content

by Travel Weekly

Travel Weekly
  • Destinations
  • News

APT Launches 2025 Asia Adventures

APT has launched its Asia Adventures for 2025, including new luxury holidays in India, Sri Lanka and Japan. Five new tours lead guests to the highlights of India, including a seven-night cruise along the rarely travelled Lower Ganges aboard the Ganges Voyager. Further south, Sri Lanka’s greatest destinations are revealed on a new 15-day Land […]

  • Cruise
  • Luxury
  • News

Seabourn announces Western Kimberley Traditional Owners as Godparents of Seabourn Pursuit

Seabourn has named Western Kimberley Traditional Owners, the Wunambal Gaambera, as Godparents of the ultra-luxury purpose-built Seabourn Pursuit. It is the first cruise line to appoint Traditional Owners as godparents of a ship. Seabourn Pursuit embarks on its inaugural season in the Kimberley region this June. The naming ceremony will take place on Seabourn Pursuit’s […]