Global Trade Rejoices As Suez Canal Blockage Comes Unstuck
The Ever Given is pulled by one of the Suez Canal tugboats earlier today. (AP pic)SUEZ: The MV Ever Given was refloated and the Suez Canal reopened today, sparking relief almost a week after the huge container ship got stuck during a sandstorm and blocked a major artery for global trade.
“Admiral Osama Rabie, head of the Suez Canal Authority, has announced the resumption of shipping traffic in the Suez Canal,” the SCA said in a statement.
Television footage showed tugboat crews sounding their foghorns in celebration after the Ever Given, a cargo megaship the length of four football fields, was dislodged from the banks of the Suez.
The breakthrough followed what appeared to be a setback and came moments after the ship had temporarily settled back into the diagonal position it had been stuck in after running aground last Tuesday.
Maritime data company Lloyd’s List said the blockage had held up an estimated US$9.6 billion worth of cargo each day between Asia and Europe.
By the end of the drama, the tailback of ships had reaching 425 at the two ends of the canal, in the Mediterranean and Red Sea.
Tugboat flotilla
The Japanese-owned ship had been partially dislodged earlier today, triggering immediate praise from Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
“Today, Egyptians have been successful in putting to an end the crisis of the stranded ship in the Suez Canal, despite the enormous complexity surrounding the process,” Sisi said.
Egypt was estimated to have lost some US$12 to US$14 million in revenue from the canal for each day it was closed, according to the canal authority.
After the 200,000-tonne ship was refloated, it was expected to take around three and a half days to clear the traffic jam of ships, Rabie said, praising rescue efforts.
Salvage crews have been working around the clock.
They had focussed on efforts to remove sand around the ship, with 27,000 cubic metres cleared at a depth of 18m, SCA spokesman George Safwat said yesterday.
Knock-on effects
The crisis has forced companies to choose between waiting or rerouting vessels around Africa, which adds a huge fuel bill, 9,000km and over a week of travel to the trip between Asia and Europe.
Russia offered assistance yesterday, following other countries including the US that have made similar offers.
In a sign of the knock-on effects from the Suez blockage, authorities in war-wracked Syria said the crisis had hit its fuel imports from Iran and forced it to ration already scarce supplies.
Romania’s animal health agency said 11 ships carrying livestock out of the country were also impacted, while the charity Animals International warned of a potential “tragedy” affecting some 130,000 animals. - FMT
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