New Zealand’s cruise regions ready for 2012-13 season
Media Release
5 October 2012
New Zealand’s
cruise regions ready for 2012-13
season
(Amends and
replaces previously issued press
release)
As the Dawn
Princess arrives into Auckland tomorrow to kick off what
will be another record breaking season, cruise regions
around New Zealand are readying themselves to deliver an
even better experience for their visitors.
Port satisfaction surveys undertaken by cruise lines showed New Zealand cruise regions delivered an outstanding season in 2011/2012, with New Zealand ports scoring well above 85% for most lines.
Regions around New Zealand have embraced cruise over the years and many of them deliver a great destination experience.
At the 2012 TIA Summit this week, Ann Sherry AO, CEO of Carnival Australia which operates a combined fleet of cruise ships including P&O Cruises, Princess Cruises and Cunard Line, highlighted a number of New Zealand regions for embracing cruise. Ms Sherry praised Bay of Islands for its ambassador programme and Maori welcome; Picton for its flower ladies who welcome passengers with corsages; and Napier whose residents come out dressed in period outfits and their classic cars to farewell passengers.
New initiatives for this season
include:
• Bay of Islands’ upgrade of passenger
facilities on Waitangi wharf, ensuring smoother tour
dispatch and shelter for passengers
• Dunedin’s
accreditation programme to ensure a high level of service
for cruise passengers with the port putting on a marquee
where passengers can wait for transport under shelter with
access to complimentary Wi-Fi and visitor
information
• Tauranga’s welcoming facility which
offers passengers sheltered seating and access to visitor
information
• Akaroa has measures in place to ensure
the wharf does not become overcrowded when passengers
arrive, improving their visitor experience and ensuring
smoother transfers.
Craig Harris, Cruise New Zealand Chairperson and winner of the 2012 Horwath HTL Sir Jack Newman Award for his outstanding contribution to the tourism industry, commends these regions for embracing cruise. But he is encouraging them to think about investing in their infrastructure to ensure they can continue to accommodate cruise ships as they get bigger.
Carrying 3,114 passengers and 1,176 crew, Royal Caribbean’s Voyager of the Seas will be the largest ship to ever visit New Zealand when it arrives in November. The next generation ships are expected to be much bigger, Mr Harris says.
ends