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MARAD 09-05 |
Contact: Susan Clark |
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Tel.: (202) 366-5807 |
Overall Departures Up More Than 12 Percent in 2004
More people are choosing to depart from
North American cruise passenger traffic increased overall by 12.8 percent in 2004, with more than 9.4 million passengers traveling on the 17 major cruise lines. These figures are up from the 8.3 million passengers traveling on the same lines in 2003.
Although
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The total number of days passengers spent cruising increased by 15 percent in 2004. Cruises lasting six to eight days are still the most common, even though cruises nine days or longer grew 38 percent. The survey results mark the first time cruises lasting nine days or more have surpassed two to five day long cruises.
The figures are part of a statistical series issued quarterly by MARAD on cruise passenger traffic, with data for the 17 major cruise lines operating cruise ships with a capacity greater than 750 passengers.
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