- Norwegian Cruise Line has joined Carnival Cruise Line in calling for a whole-of-government approach to the capacity shortage in Australian cruise.
- The line’s APAC MD Ben Angell said Japan had set the example and New Zealand had already adopted the approach.
- A senior NCL executive from Miami suggested the economic upside would be bigger and better ships.
Norwegian Cruise Lineโs Asia-Pacific boss Ben Angell has backedย Cruise Passengerโsย call for a national cruise summit, urging governments across Australia to adopt a coordinated, pro-cruise approach to remove excessive regulation and unlock growth in the regionโs cruise sector.
Speaking at an event in Sydney to unveil the upcoming Australia and New Zealand season forย Norwegian Spirit, Angell, the lineโs Managing Director and Vice President APAC, said the industry urgently needs unified leadership to rebuild after a period of stalled capacity and policy stagnation.
โI think all the cruise lines are saying the same thing,โ Mr Angell told Cruise Passenger publisher Peter Lynch. โThere are world-class examples of how to do this โ Japan is one of the best in recent years โ where thereโs a whole-of-government and industry approach to cruise, where everyoneโs moving in the same direction.โ
Jason Krimmel,ย NCLโs Chief Sales and Marketing Officer, suggested Norwegian was always looking at ways to deal with the Australian market, which he pointed out had the highest-spending international guests.
While no announcement was imminent,ย NCLโs long-term goal remained to bring newer tonnage to the region.
โItโs our goal to have those ships here in the future because we know itโs important for growth beyond the local market,โ Krimmel said. โThatโs what will keep peopleโs interest in cruising beyond their own shores.โ
Cruise Passengerย broke the story of how Australia’s capacity for this season isย down about 30 per centย as lines redeploy ships to less restrictive and lower-cost markets. Australiaโs complicated regulatory landscape and high port charges have been repeatedly cited by cruise operators as key barriers to investment.
Mr Angell said New Zealand had demonstrated how government and industry collaboration can drive recovery.
โI would say New Zealand has done a wonderful job in the last 12 months,โ he said. โTheyโve held the kind of forum weโre calling for here โ bringing everyone to the table to find practical solutions that make cruising easier and more attractive.โ

Global boom, local bottleneck
Angell acknowledged that cruise demand globally is โthrough the roofโ, but said Australia risks missing out on that momentum unless it reforms.
โOf course, itโs challenging when global cruise demand is soaring, but weโre seeing brands shifting ships to markets that are easier to operate in,โ he said. โThereโs incredible demand chasing limited capacity โ yet Australiaโs narrative has been skewed too much toward the domestic home-port market. We need to think about the totality of the opportunity: inbound arrivals, fly-cruise, and outbound cruise travel.โ
He saidย NCLโs approach was to help โreframe the conversationโ about cruising in this region from a narrow domestic focus to a three-pillar strategy that balancesย international fly-cruise, inbound tourism and home-port operations.
โWeโre seeing new segments discovering cruise โ younger travellers, families, and those drawn by value amid economic uncertainty,โ Angell said. โThe average age of the cruiser is now around 40. Seventy-eight per cent of past cruisers plan to sail again in 2025, and 26 per cent of non-cruisers are planning their first cruise.โ
He said NCLโs local office was working with travel partners to identify potential cruisers within their international holiday databases. โWe want to find those who might add a cruise to their holiday, and those who will choose a cruise instead of a land-only trip,โ he said.

Norwegian chases “Grown-up holidays”
Angell saidย NCLย remained committed to Australia and New Zealand despite the headwinds.ย Norwegian Spiritย will return for a third deployment in 2025-26 and a fourth in 2026-27, sailing 24 itineraries across two seasons with maiden calls includingย Phillip Island, Fremantle and Kangaroo Island.
โWeโve got five Sydney round trips in our 2027 season โ thatโs us demonstrating a commitment to this region like never before,โ he said. โWeโre filling a gap left by some of the domestic home-port reshuffling.โ
Mr Angell saidย Norwegian Spiritย โ recently relaunched under the campaignย โWhere Grown-Ups Holidays Beginโย โ is designed to offer a more tranquil, adult-centred experience for couples and experienced cruisers.
โWe saw a gap in the market for a product that isnโt about waterslides and queues for ice-cream,โ he said. โSpirit offers a serene, quality product with huge variety on board โ perfect for guests who want a culturally rich, adult-centric experience.โ
NCLโs itineraries will stretch across Asia, the South Pacific, and Australia-New Zealand, with a focus on longer stays and immersive port experiences. โGuests are asking for more cultural immersion and more time in the destination โ our itineraries now average 11 hours in port,โ Mr Angell said.
Australian cruisers are “highest-value guests”
Krimmel reinforced the companyโs commitment to the region, calling Australia โone of our highest-value source markets anywhere in the world.โ
โThe quality of the guest coming from Australia and New Zealand is much higher than what we see in some other parts of the world,โ Krimmel said. โTheir booking window is further out, and they tend to travel for longer and spend more. That makes this market incredibly meaningful for us.โ
Krimmel said NCLโs international guests โ including Australians โ are โa hallmark of our successโ and central to the companyโs long-term growth plans
โWe are here to stay,โ he said. โSome others may have scaled back, but for us, this market is a tremendous priority. Weโre continuously looking at how to optimise this region because of the high-value guests that come from here.โ

Potential for newer ships โ if conditions improve
Asked about the prospects of seeing newer vessels such as the Prima-class ships in local waters, Mr Krimmel said the company was keen but cautious, citing infrastructure and regulatory constraints.
โWeโre constantly talking about what we can do to get exposure for a newer-class ship down here,โ he said. โThere are some limitations โ itโs not just port size, but propulsion and navigation capabilities. We continue to have those conversations with local ports.โ
He said that while no announcement was imminent, NCLโs long-term goal remained to bring newer tonnage to the region. โItโs our goal to have those ships here in the future because we know itโs important for growth beyond the local market,โ Mr Krimmel said. โThatโs what will keep peopleโs interest in cruising beyond their own shores.โ
Growth markets: Asia, South Pacific and beyond
Mr Angell said Asia had โgone gangbustersโ for NCL in recent years, with 40 immersive itineraries from nine to 19 days across seven departure ports. The lineโs smaller Jewel-class vessels โ such as Norwegian Spirit โ are proving especially popular with Australian travellers.
โGuests love the intimacy of these ships and the quality of the onboard experience,โ he said. โTheyโve been refurbished to a standard thatโs absolutely unmatched.โ
The South Pacific is also performing strongly, with 15 unique sailings planned for 2026-27, operating from Sydney, Lautoka, Papeete and Honolulu. โThe demand for longer South Pacific itineraries has been phenomenal,โ Mr Angell said.

Industry optimism despite uncertainty
Despite economic headwinds and regulatory hurdles, both executives said cruise remains the best-value holiday option โ a message they urged the travel trade to amplify.
โInflation is a scary word, but for cruise, it actually reinforces our value proposition,โ Mr Krimmel said. โCruising remains the most valuable vacation experience out there, particularly in uncertain times.โ
Mr Angell agreed, saying the broader narrative around cruising in Australia needed to shift from โwhatโs leavingโ to โwhatโs possible.โ
โNCL isnโt just participating in the market,โ he said. โWeโre helping to lead it โ with a different narrative that looks at inbound, fly-cruise and home-port opportunities together.โ
A case for leadership
Mr Angell said a cruise summit โ bringing together federal and state governments, industry, ports and tourism bodies โ would send a clear message that Australia wants to compete.
โWeโve got world-class destinations, passionate travellers and proven demand,โ he said. โWhat we need is the same whole-of-government coordination weโve seen in places like Japan. Everyone moving in the same direction โ thatโs how weโll get cruise capacity growing again.โ
As Cruise Passenger has highlighted, the stakes are high: with capacity still a third below pre-pandemic levels, Australiaโs reputation as a cruise-friendly destination is at risk.
โWeโre committed to this part of the world โ today and for the future,โ Mr Angell said. โNow we just need the policy settings to match that ambition.โ







Yes I would like to comment. Like myself and many in our age bracket 70+ would like to see more trips with suitable departure places. My husband and I would look at more trips leaving from Adelaide for instance,beside the flying to and from Sydney or Melbourne
Especially for people with disabilities. They say half the trip is getting there well i disagree with that. By the time you board your cruise ship one
Is very exhausted and needs the holiday. Bring Adelaide port back and you will see more happy passengers. Regards Mrs Y Kennedy