The cruise industry has given itself one black eye after another over the past few months — from a ship that floated adrift in a storm off Norway, to one that ran up on a dock in Venice, to the mechanical failure that left thousands of vacationers stranded in Barcelona.
Add in recurring incidents like overboard cases and stomach illness, and it’s enough to make some people swear off cruising forever.
With cruises more connected to the internet than ever before, news of a disaster can go viral fast. But more information doesn’t mean the floating metropolises are becoming less safe.
A study by economic consultant G.P. Wild — commissioned by the cruise industry’s trade group and released in March — makes the case that cruises are getting safer over time. Even as capacity increased 55 percent between 2009 and 2018, the report said, the number of overall “operational incidents” declined 37 percent and the rate of man-overboard cases dropped 35 percent.