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Troubled Waters for Coral Expeditions Following Second High-Profile Incident

  • 7:40 am - December 29, 2025
  • world

PAPUA NEW GUINEA : The grounding of the Coral Adventurer off Papua New Guinea on Saturday marks a turbulent end to the year for Cairns-based operator Coral Expeditions. The incident comes as the company is already under the microscope for a previous tragedy involving a passenger death.

This 12-night PNG expedition was the vessel’s first major trip back at sea following the death of 80-year-old Suzanne Rees in October. Ms. Rees, a tourist from New South Wales, was found dead on the remote Lizard Island several hours after she was allegedly left behind by the Coral Adventurer during a shore excursion.

That tragedy sparked a wave of ongoing investigations by:

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA)

Workplace Health and Safety Queensland

The latest “bungle” near Lae has brought in the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB). Chief Commissioner Angus Mitchell confirmed that investigators are now collecting ship tracking data, weather information, and maintenance records to determine how a sophisticated luxury vessel hit a reef in the early hours of the morning.

For a luxury brand charging over $1,100 per night per person, the back-to-back incidents raise serious questions regarding operational protocols. While the operator maintains that initial inspections of the reef strike show no damage, the PR damage may be more difficult to repair.

As the PNG Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre assists the vessel, the industry is watching closely to see if regulatory bodies will mandate stricter oversight for the embattled cruise line.

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