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PortEconomics
  • September 22nd, 2025
PortEconomics
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    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

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    Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

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    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

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    Stakeholders’ attitudes toward container terminal automation

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    Toward green container liner shipping: joint optimization of heterogeneous fleet deployment, speed optimization, and fuel bunkering

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    Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit

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    When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

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    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

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    Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends

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    PortEconomics members among best-performing scholars globally

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    Accessibility or connectivity: why is it correct to say that in the Caribbean the main logistics problem is connectivity?

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    Webinar: short sea shipping services in the southern Caribbean region

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    Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

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    In a tight spot: American ports in global supply chains

    Cruise industry in 2025 at a glance

    Cruise industry in 2025 at a glance

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    The box that makes the world go around: container terminals and global trade

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    Antwerp-Bruges surpasses Rotterdam in Q1 2025: a structural shift or short-term fluctuation?

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Private entry in cruise terminal operations in the Mediterranean SeaCruise

Private entry in cruise terminal operations in the Mediterranean Sea

August 21st, 2018 Cruise, Featured, PortStudies

READ ALSO

Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines
Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines
Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit
Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit
Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents:  Kuwait Shuwaikh Port
Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port
Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines
Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

Aiming to effectively respond to calls for upgrading cruise terminals, while safeguarding public spending, port authorities started to seek the active involvement of third parties to finance, construct, operate, and/or commercially develop cruise facilities. Specialized cruise terminals replace multi-purpose or temporary docking facilities. New cruise terminals are built and existing ones are upsized and upgraded, imposing additional investments on the hosting ports.

In their award winning paper (Winner of “Best Conference Paper”, International Association of Maritime Economists (IAME) Conference, Kyoto, Japan, June 2017), PortEconomics members Thanos Pallis, Francesco Parola, Giovanni Satta & Theo Notteboom examine private entry strategies and internationalization patterns in the cruise terminal industry, focusing on the second biggest cruise region in the world, the Mediterranean and its adjoining seas.

A database detailing the ownership structures observed in cruise terminals in 18 different countries forms the backbone of the empirical analysis. This dataset details the entry strategies and implementation options of cruise terminal operators, their corporate features and strategies, and the emerging partnership dynamics. Methodologically, our analysis is based on earlier constructs used to conceptualize entry forms and strategic management in container terminals and port governance systems.

The findings suggest that cruise terminals are subject to an initial phase of privatization and internationalization. The outcomes point to the emergence of International Cruise Terminal Operators (ICTOs) and the active presence of cruise lines and other types of entities (including port and shipping companies, shipping agents, chambers of commerce, etc.).

The scholars also place their empirical findings next to recent contributions in the more mature (in terms of the timescale of entry) container port industry. Such a detailed comparison allows one to assess whether entry in the various port markets differs only as regards the timescales of privatization – thus a generalisation is possible – or forms of entry and internationalization processes in each market are associated with different features. While the cruise terminal development path shows some similarities with what happened in container ports a few decades ago, an array of differences also emerge.

The authors’ version of the paper can be freely downloaded via PortEconomics.

Please cite the paper as: Athanasios A. Pallis, Francesco Parola, Giovanni Satta, Theo E. Notteboom (2017), Private entry in cruise terminal operations in the Mediterranean Sea, Maritime Economics and Logistics, https://doi.org/10.1057/s41278-017-0091-7

Next article The 'Yin' and 'Yang' of port governance
Previous article Digitalisation drives modernisation of maritime trade

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Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

Sep 12th 3:48 PM
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Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

Aug 12th 2:18 PM
Thematic Area

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Jul 21st 11:51 AM
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Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

Jul 11th 1:40 PM
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When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

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