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  • Listen up, Jadrolinija–they’re talking to you! Upgrade your fleet, add coastal cruises and improve inter-island transport. At least, that’s my interpretation of the technical jargon that follows.

    This from Lloyd’s List:

    AS Croatia prepares to enter the European Union, strategic reforms and
    structural change are necessary if the country’s ferry operators are to
    compete effectively, writes Sandra Speares.

    In a paper presented in the Maritime Policy and Management journal, Heidi
    Cottam, Michael Roe and Jonathan Challacombe of Plymouth University’s centre
    of international shipping and logistics say that Croatian fleets are
    suffering from “obsolete vessels with inferior technology, operating
    regional networks with point-to-point routings instead of global service
    activity”.

    According to the paper, EU enlargement “has changed the meaning of the
    Adriatic as a traffic corridor for tourism.

    “Today, Croatian maritime transport systems must be considered in relation
    to the interconnectivity of regional transit networks.”

    The paper urges Croatia to seek to improve the standard of passenger
    transport to that of the Single European Transport Policy.

    The paper also advocates a return to the cruise industry by Croatian
    shipping companies, initially by means of state concessions, but in the
    longer term through private funding and financing initiatives.

    The authors suggest that “Croatian operators should develop a modest fleet
    of contemporary cruise liners on the Adriatic, to niche markets that are not
    in direct competition with the leading operators”.

    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development agreed a ?26.5m
    ($35.5m) loan to modernise the port of Dubrovnik at the beginning of 2005,
    to ensure that the port would be able to accommodate three 300 m ships at
    one time, although the authors say that more investment is needed to improve
    Croatia’s traffic network.

    While Croatia has the chance to move back into the international cruise
    market, the paper says, capital remains in short supply, as is the case with
    the short sea ferry fleet where investment has been limited.

    It recommends that short sea ferries “should now be directed towards the
    international cross-trades with increased emphasis on geographical and
    product niches”.

    Government support, the paper says, will be needed to “overcome the conflict
    between the interests of the shipping and tourism industries and that of the
    national citizen”.

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