Editorial:
Time to go separate ways
The cruise ferry has prepared the market for a more
demanding type of cruises, where the driving force is a true onboard
experience rather than the joy of bringing home a plastic bag with
bottles.
After decades of evolution, the cruise ferry was born
on the Åland Sea. The basic conditions were set by the high
taxation of alcohol in Sweden and Finland, enabling tax-free sales
with exceptionally good profits. The ferry evolved into a floating
hotel, while at the same time maintaining its original role as a workhorse,
carrying large numbers of trucks with high-value goods.
One
of the most obvious benefits of the cruise ferry was that it even
attracted large volumes of passengers during the off-season. During
the 1980s, the cruise ferry phenomenon of the Åland Sea acted
as a model in many areas of Europe, and ferry operators adapted the
concept to their own routes.
But
there was always a clear difference. The sea lanes across the Åland
Sea were far away from the heavy transportation routes in the heart
of Europe. In densely populated areas, the endless need for transportation
provided the ferry operators with a firm foundation for their operations.
On these routes, the cruise ferry concept attracted more passengers
but was not crucial for the traffic itself. It was a sort of bonus,
adding icing to the cake.
In
many respects, the situation was the exact opposite on the Åland
Sea. Short cruises were the main product, deciding the schedules and
the main routes. Transportation of passengers and cargo seemed to
be more like a complementary business. Without all those passengers
making use of short cruises, most of the cruise ferries would have
fallen into disuse.
Today,
there is no longer any economic basis for a business that is so heavily
dependent on tax-free trading in Europe, although there are perhaps
one or two exceptions to this. The change came with the EU. The inter-EU
tax-free trade ended in mid-1999. On the Åland Sea, the Åland
tax exemption allows this trade to continue on ferries sailing to
or via the Åland Islands. The trend towards harmonisation of
alcohol taxation in the EU, however, will also cut the profits from
tax-free trade in the Åland traffic. Reduced prices ashore will
force the ferry companies to cut their own prices too.
Profitability
is falling because the cruise ferries generate high operating costs
due to the size of their crews. It is becoming more and more difficult
to maintain the cruise ferrys dual role as a pure transporter
and a provider of recreation. Instead, the ferry of the future will
be a cargo carrier with additional passenger capacity and much lower
operating costs.
The
ro-pax vessel will rule the post-tax-free ferry scene in Europe. Now
it is also gaining ground on the Åland Sea. But what about the
cruise part?
It is a reality that a large part of the passenger market has been
lost due to the disappearance of tax-free sales. This has been seen
in the Gulf of Bothnia and on the routes between Sweden and Germany.
The cruise ferry is by no means dead, but the world around it is shrinking
fast.
Having
said this, it is also a reality that the Finns (especially) enjoy
ferry cruising a great deal. Short cruises are also popular in the
Stockholm region. There are obviously several markets in Scandinavia
with the potential for real cruises even without
tax-free. Altogether, though, these are most likely to be considerably
smaller than the current markets for ferry cruises.

Many
shipping companies have already started to prepare themselves for
more expensive, non-tax-free cruise concepts. These are built around
vessels of the highest standards, with many different activities and
excellent service.
A
whole generation has grown up with ferry cruising on the Åland
Sea. Now the real challenge for the shipping companies is to continue
the success story of the 1980s and to bring it into a new age
an age in which the whole on-board experience is the driving force,
not just the plastic carrier bag full of bottles.
//Pär-Henrik Sjöström, Editor
Back to SSG 22, 28 November