While speaking at the American Caribbean Maritime Foundation (ACMF) Gala and Anchor Awards at the Lauderdale Yacht Club in Fort Lauderdale on Thursday evening, First Lady Arya Ali advocated for greater inclusion of women in the maritime industry through training and job opportunities. Ali served as patron of the Gala and Anchor Awards which honours stalwarts in the cargo and cruise industry for their accomplishments and positive impact on the Caribbean shipping and maritime sector.
This year, the Gala and Anchor Awards was held under the theme: “Talent in your backyard”. Noting that talent exists here in the Caribbean, Mrs Ali posited that talent is underutilized when women are unable to access opportunities and contribute to the development of the region’s maritime industry.
She drew attention to the fact that women represent only 1.2 percent of the global seafarer workforce as per the BIMCO/ICS 2021 Seafarer Workforce Report; underscoring that this represented a positive trend in gender balance, with the report estimating 24,059 women serving as seafarers, which is a 45.8 percent increase compared with the 2015 report.
“Now, imagine if we were to make more opportunities available to women in the maritime sector, how many of our challenges could be addressed – including crewing shortages,” she told a gathering of almost two hundred people which included executives from some of the largest shipping and cruise line companies in the Caribbean. With the global shipping industry suffering acute crewing shortages, particularly among officers, the first lady said that this is the ideal time for companies and agencies to think about greater inclusion of women in the industry.
To this end, she highlighted an ongoing collaboration between the Office of the First Lady and the Atlantic Alliance Maritime and Offshore Training Institute – a 100% woman-owned Guyanese company – in which one hundred women from the hinterlands are being provided with scholarships for maritime training. Ali said that efforts like these must continue with support from partners like ACMF, which has since provided scholarships to forty-two Guyanese.
The event was attended by a number of officials including President and CEO of Royal Caribbean International, Michael Bayley; President of the Caribbean Maritime University (CMU), Professor Andrew Spencer; President of ACMF, Dr. Geneive Brown Metzger; and Director-General of the Maritime Authority of Jamaica, Rear Admiral Peter Brady among others.