New Study Reveals Cruise Ships May Not Evacuate in Required 30 Minutes
Researchers found widespread skepticism among ship crews about meeting international evacuation standards, citing inadequate training and psychological unpreparedness. The findings expose gaps between regulatory requirements and operational reality—a critical issue for cruise operators facing liability risks and maritime authorities responsible for passenger safety.
Originaltitel: Cruise/Passenger ship evacuation: A human-centered evaluation for improvement
This paper investigates the complex and multidimensional challenges affecting the efficiency of emergency evacuations onboard cruise/passenger ships. Despite the existence of a comprehensive regulatory framework established by the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) and the International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW), which prescribes mandatory training activities, time-bound evacuation requirements, and strict technical safety standards, real-life experiences and a number of maritime incidents continue to expose critical deficiencies. Based on the comparison of literature review results with qualitative data gathered from surveys, semi-structured interviews among seafarers, and an onboard observation study, this research effort explores the human, organizational, and design-related attributes that inhibit timely and efficient evacuations. Analytical results have uncovered profound skepticism among seafarers around the feasibility of evacuating large cruise/passenger vessels within the established 30-minute regulatory timeframe, citing shortcomings in training, lack of psychological preparedness, and coordination/communication difficulties, particularly under stressful situations. The human element emerges as a very influential actor, with cognitive denial and poor safety culture frequently delaying effective responses during emergency situations. Recommendations deriving from seafarers themselves support (among others) the adoption of enhanced psychological training and better utilization of crews’ working language, as well as increased manning levels; future integration of evacuation technologies based on ethical standards also stands out. Improvements in emergency evacuation safety aboard cruise/passenger ships depend on the integration of seafarers’ practical experiences into both policy development and operational activities, opening the way towards fostering a proactive, human-centered safety culture throughout the concerned shipping sectors. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------Cite this article: APA Style:Andreadakis, A., Dalaklis, D., & Blaisdell, A. (2026). Cruise/Passenger ship evacuation: A human-centered evaluation for improvement. Maritime Technology and Research, 8(3), 285838. https://doi.org/10.33175/mtr.2026.285838 MDPI Style:Andreadakis, A.; Dalaklis, D.; Blaisdell, A. Cruise/Passenger ship evacuation: A human-centered evaluation for improvement. Marit. Technol. Res. 2026, 8, 285838. https://doi.org/10.33175/mtr.2026.285838 Vancouver Style:Andreadakis A, Dalaklis D, Blaisdell A. (2026). Cruise/Passenger ship evacuation: A human-centered evaluation for improvement. Marit. Technol. Res. 8(3):285838. https://doi.org/10.33175/mtr.2026.285838 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Highlights Cruise/Passenger Ship Evacuation inefficiencies persist despite SOLAS/STCW compliance, primarily due to human, organizational, and psychological factors rather than purely technical or design limitations. Seafarers express strong skepticism about achieving the 30-minute evacuation requirement on large passenger vessels, highlighting discrepancies between regulatory expectations and real-world operational conditions. Training deficiencies, fatigue, inconsistent standards, and drill limitations undermine crew preparedness, revealing a gap between formal compliance and effective emergency performance. Human behavior, including cognitive denial, panic, and communication failures, is identified as the most critical and unpredictable factor influencing evacuation outcomes. Enhancing safety culture, psychological training, crew coordination, and integrating ethical technological solutions are essential for improving evacuation efficiency and reducing casualties.