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As cruise ships get larger, are they any safer?

Grounding of the Costa Concordia raises concerns about the safety of today's megaships

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NEW YORK (AP) -- The grounding and capsizing of the Costa Concordia has raised questions about the safety of the ever-increasing size of cruise ships. But experts say that these new megaships have the latest safety and navigation technology and pose little risk to passengers despite their gargantuan bulk.

The Concordia — a ship more than two-and-a-half football fields long — was carrying more than 4,200 passengers and crew Friday night when it hit a reef off the Italian coast, flooded with water and listed to one side. At least six people died in the accident with another 16 unaccounted for, including two American passengers.

The investigation of the crash is focusing on the ship's captain, not its design.

Pier Luigi Foschi, CEO of Costa Crociere SpA, distanced his cruise line on Monday from the jailed captain, Francesco Schettino, saying that the captain "took an initiative of his own will which is contrary to our written rules of conduct."

Industry watchers also placed the blame on human error.

The accident has more to do with training, oversight and adherence to policies than the design or size of the ship, said Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of Cruise Critic.

"This was just sloppy," she said. "There's nothing more to the story than this was sloppy and unacceptable."

The Concordia is a little more than five years old and part of a recent trend to build bigger and flashier cruise ships that can carry more passengers than ever before.

The largest of these — Royal Caribbean's Allure of the Seas and sister ship Oasis of the Seas — were launched in the last three years and can carry more than 6,000 passengers. When the Titanic sank nearly a century ago, there were 2,200 people on board.

These larger ships are harder to maneuver and can't fit into all the channels frequented by smaller ships. Alan Wilson, editor of Cruise News Daily, equated it to the difference between driving a Greyhound bus and a tiny Volkswagen car.

But cruise lines and ship captains understand those limitations. Routes are carefully planned with these ships' size in mind.

"There are places they can't go," Wilson said. "They know where they can't fit the ships."

In the case of the Concordia, a safe route was put into the ship's navigation system, the company CEO said. The ship left that course only because the captain made an unauthorized deviation, he said.

Costa is owned by Miami-based Carnival Corp., which operates 101 ships under several brands including Carnival, Cunard, Holland America, Princess and Seabourn. The company said the Concordia would remain out of operation at least through November, causing the company $85 million to $95 million in lost bookings. Carnival also has a $30 million insurance deductible for damage to the ship and a $10 million personal injury deductible.

When an accident does happen, larger ships pose a greater challenge simply because of the sheer number of passengers.

Jack Hickey, a Miami attorney who has practiced maritime law for 32 years, said while cruise ship crews get some training on operation of lifeboats, overall safety training is usually an afterthought.

The sheer size of today's cruise ships only makes the lack of safety training worse, Hickey said, "because now, as opposed to 10 or 20 years ago, you are dealing with thousands and thousands of people. It's very difficult and dangerous to get off a ship like that."

The cruise lines disagree.

"With size comes safety," said William Wright, senior vice president of marine operations for Royal Caribbean International and the first captain of Oasis of the Seas. Royal Caribbean operates seven of the largest 10 ships in the world.

Wright said these megaships are wider, more stable, have the latest navigation systems and more watertight compartmentalization than their predecessors.

Michael Crye, executive vice president of Cruise Lines International Association, the industry's trade association, said that the newer, large ships have better technology to communicate with passengers in case of an emergency, have life jackets in more central locations and carry lifeboats that can be boarded more quickly than prior models.

"As ships have gotten larger, the issues of safety must be planned into these ships," he said. "Along with bigger ships comes more responsibility to safety."

Since 2005, Crye said, more than 100 million people have taken cruises worldwide. There have been just 16 deaths from accidents in that period.

___

AP Writer Curt Anderson in Miami contributed to this report.

___

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

 

16 comments

  • Bekah  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  1 month 10 days ago
    I have been on four cruises in the past four years. EVERY TIME, we are made to go to the "Muster Station" that we are assigned to and hear the safety drill and how to go about getting to a rescue boat. There is some frustration in this (especially if standing in the hot Florida sun in Port Everglades) but there is a GOOD REASON they do it! This Captain was the one at fault, not the ship. There are CLEAR CHARTED routes for a reason, and he veered off of it. Also, if your time is up here, it doesn't matter where you are! Planes, Cars or Cruises, it can happen anywhere. You only hear about the BAD ones, you don't hear about the thousands of perfectly safe vacations, flights, drives to work etc. Bottom line, the Captain has some MAJOR explaining to do, but we don't have to throw the baby out with the bathwater! Cruising is still a very safe way to vacation, but as in anything, there is always risk.
  • Dave S  •  1 month 10 days ago
    It'll take a Megaliner sinking with a huge loss of life before people realize that Safety has begun to slip. Yes the ships carry boats and rafts for everyone but they're useless if the crew doesn't know what to do in an emergency
  • JOHNO  •  1 month 10 days ago
    Lifeboat drills are one of the first things that happens on a cruise.

    I don't know what the statistics are but I would not be surprises if cruise ships are the safest way to travel. The lifeboats are the size of cabin cruisers and can carry approximately 60 people. They use them to take passengers into destinations that the ships cannot go into. This accident is a fluke. I would go on a cruise tomorrow if I could afford it.

    Some inventor needs to come up with a solution. When a ship tilts to one side, it can take half of the lifeboats out of comission because of the slant. Maybe things are out of order--that the first thing that should happen is that the lifeboats are lowered close to the water immediately when there is a problem. Maybe some kind of wheels on the sides of the lifeboats which would allow them to roll down the side of a slanted ship.
  • MS  •  1 month 10 days ago
    The world's biggest ship controlled by a brain the size of a peanut.
  • Thomas  •  Dallas, Texas  •  1 month 10 days ago
    I spent 20+ years in the US Navy, most of those on carriers, and a cruiser. The difference is that the crews of military ships maintain a fairly consistent crew ( there is a regular change over of crew members, but it is a small number), and that regular and detailed training and drills are carried out regularly with attention to detail. Add to this, due to the nature of the military they can require participation and provide "guidance" to those who do not know their duties and responsibility.

    I have also cruised, once, along the inside passage of Alaska. Due to my prior naval service, I was keen on paying attention to the construction, operation and safety (fire, flooding, and abandon ship). I participated in the only drill of the week, the emergency muster and abandon ship drill. While the crew provided guidance, I did not get the feeling of their comfort level in the event of an actual emergency. This was due to the fact that they read from the drill script, but they did not ever make any passenger ACTUALLY DO ANYTHING! Most passengers joked, laughed and tried to order more drinks!

    Also, due to my military experience, I was always aware of my location in the ship relative to my cabin, and most importantly, the main deck and life boats. From talking to my fellow passengers it was readily apparent that most of my fellow passengers did not, they just accepted at face value that nothing would ever go wrong.

    IMHO, it is fully the fault of the ships captain and the navigation officer for running aground, as well as the bridge watch team. The captain is fully responsible, but the watch team also has the responsibility to double check each other, to provide backup, to always question and provide feedback with a questioning attitude. Trust, verify and question yourself and others.
  • Sue G  •  Austin, Texas  •  1 month 10 days ago
    I have been on many cruises. The past few years, the ones we have taken.....the emergency drill was before the ship even left the port. One time I didn't feel it was necessary, and tried to hide in my room since I was a "pro" on these cruises. Now, I realize just how important these drills are to the safety of passengers. Definitely the captain is at fault......not just for sailing so close to the shore, but it sounds like the crew could have been better trained in handling such an emergency.
  • Aimee  •  Troy, Michigan  •  1 month 10 days ago
    think about it 4200 persons with only 16 missing and 6 dead, my prayers to those families, but it could have been a lot worst someone did something right and saved a lot of people. Give credit to those who deserve it.
  • Sami Nicole  •  Panama City, Florida  •  1 month 10 days ago
    It wasn't human error it was human stupidity! Human error consists of a mistake or accidental. This was a deliberate manuver for this so called human error to have occured. The writer needs to call it what it really was and that was stupidity, plain and simple.
  • Big E  •  Lansing, Michigan  •  1 month 10 days ago
    ive been on 3 cruises and can only imagine the chaos if something happened but that could be avoided if the company that ownes these ships put more tight safeguards in place maybe someone on the mainland keeping track of the ship its everymove and has to ok any kind of diversion off its course just a thought i dont have an answer but with today tech this kind of stuff should never happen. Its very sad that it takes lost of lives to change and again all the company can say is how much it will cost here is an idea be proactive before disaster happens.
  • Pete  •  1 month 10 days ago
    6 dead people out of 4200 means that 99.857% of the passengers survived...which means that only .143% died! The crew should be applauded for such a low death rate...
  • MS  •  1 month 10 days ago
    While the industry fat-cats are extolling (lying about) the safety of the ship, in the background you can see the ship sinking. Were it not for pictures, the fat-cats would be telling you that the ship has stopped to take water. Their bean counters are calculating the cost of business lost.
    Had this happened a few miles from shore, there would have been hundreds if not thousands dead or missing.
  • Certain Davis  •  1 month 10 days ago
    The bigger they are the safer they are?! That is about the most naive and criminally stupid thing I've heard anyone say. Isn't that EXACTLY what they said about Titanic? Do these money hungry builders ever get any sense of limitations or history? It seems like they are just tempting fate.
  • Magron  •  New Hartford, New York  •  1 month 9 days ago
    "William Wright, senior vice president of marine operations for Royal Caribbean International "
    Continues to tell the world how safe the ships are, even with the flooded, sunk hulk of the ship on a screen behind him. LOL who cares anymore? the automatic, childish and no content denial is expected. Here's the mindset that will ensure another sinking.
  • FUDC!  •  1 month 10 days ago
    Jaws
  • APPEASE  •  Charlottesville, Virginia  •  1 month 10 days ago
    hey, is this caddyshack?
  • Steve  •  Denver, Colorado  •  1 month 10 days ago
    The cruise ship industry has been lucky so far. The ship are the least seaworthy things on the water.
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