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BBC News

Egypt's Suez Canal blocked by large container ship
Published 20 minutes ago

The Ever Given ship aground in Suez on 24 March 2021
IMAGE COPYRIGHTREUTERS
image captionThe 200,000 tonne vessel got stuck amid high winds

Egypt's Suez Canal has been blocked by a large container ship that ran aground after losing control, causing a traffic jam of cargo vessels in the region.
Tug boats were deployed to help shift the 400m-long (1312ft) and 59m-wide ship - the Ever Given - but there are fears it could remain trapped for days.
The ship's owner said it had been blown off course by "a suspect gust of wind" just north of the port of Suez.

Egypt says it has reopened the canal's older channel to divert traffic.


The waterway connects the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, providing the shortest sea link between Asia and Europe.
The Ever Given, registered in Panama, was bound for the port city of Rotterdam in the Netherlands from China and was passing northwards through the canal on its way to the Mediterranean.

Graphic shows the container vessel Ever Given in the Suez Canal, Egypt
IMAGE COPYRIGHTVESSEL FINDER
image captionA graphic image from the Vessel Finder site shows several tug boats alongside the Ever Given

The 200,000 tonne ship, built in 2018 and operated by Taiwanese transport company Evergreen Marine, ran aground and became lodged sideways across the waterway at about 07:40 local time (05:40 GMT) on Tuesday.

At 400m long - the length of four football pitches - the ship has blocked the path of dozens of other vessels which are now trapped in lines in both directions.


Evergreen Marine said the ship was "suspected of being hit by a sudden strong wind, causing the hull to deviate... and accidentally hit the bottom and run aground".
A photo posted on Instagram by Julianna Cona on Tuesday, reportedly taken from on board another cargo ship - the Maersk Denver - directly behind the Ever Given, shows the stranded vessel with what appears to be a small digger clearing sand along the bank.

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The Suez Canal Authority (SCA) said it was working to refloat the giant ship, using rescue and tug units, according to AFP news agency. Its chairman, Admiral Osama Rabie, also said they had reopened older section of the canal to ease the bottleneck of marine traffic caused by the incident.
Dr Sal Mercogliano, a maritime historian based in the US state of North Carolina, told the BBC that incidents such as this were rare, but could have "huge ramifications for global trade".

"This is the largest vessel ever to go aground in the Suez Canal," he said, adding that the ship got lodged in the embankment and would have lost power and its ability to steer.

"If they are unable to pull her free... in a high tide, they are going to have to start removing cargo."

The operation to move the Ever Given, which could include removing large amounts of sand from around the areas where the vessel is grounded, may take days, Cairo24 news reported, citing an official at the Suez Canal Authority.
View across the deck of a container ship entering the Suez Canal, Egypt, (with the city of Suez at upper right)
IMAGE COPYRIGHTSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
image captionA container ship entering the Suez Canal in Egypt, with the city of Suez on the right (file photo)

In 2017, a Japanese container vessel blocked the canal after it ran aground following reported mechanical issues. The Egyptian authorities deployed tug boats and the ship was refloated within hours.

The Suez Canal crosses the Suez isthmus in Egypt. It is about 193km (120 miles) long and incorporates three natural lakes.

In 2015, Egypt's government opened a major expansion of the canal that deepened the main waterway and provided ships with a 35km (22 mile) channel parallel to it.
 

glockman

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GIANT container ship gets stuck in Suez Canal, blocking ALL traffic & sparking frantic effort to pull it free (PHOTO)
24 Mar, 2021 01:00 / Updated 7 hours ago
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GIANT container ship gets stuck in Suez Canal, blocking ALL traffic & sparking frantic effort to pull it free (PHOTO)

FILE PHOTO: The Ever Given container ship is seen in waters near Cuxhaven, Germany, March 3, 2020. © MarineTraffic.com / screenshot

One of the world’s biggest container ships has caused a massive traffic jam on the both sides of the Suez Canal after it ran aground and blocked the key waterway. The predicament has spawned a hasty effort to refloat the ship.

The Panama-flagged cargo ship Ever Given has been thrust into the spotlight of social media attention after the 59m-wide vessel found itself trapped in the narrow channel connecting the Mediterranean to the Red Sea.

The larger-than-life ship, which is listed as the world’s 13th biggest with an overall length of some 400m, has been travelling from Shenzhen, China, to the Dutch port of Rotterdam, where it was set to dock on March 31.

However, the voyage has been stopped in its tracks since early on Tuesday, when the Ever Given managed to wedge itself in the canal just north of the Egyptian port of Suez.

With the ship unable to dislodge on its own, Egyptian authorities have dispatched heavy machinery in an apparent bid to dig out the sand around the vessel. The hastily-arranged operation has prompted eye rolls on social media, however, with netizens pointing at the massive size difference between the regular digger and the Ever Given similar to that of David and Goliath.

Despite all the efforts, which included as many as six tugboats toiling around at the beached ship, it has not moved an inch as of early Wednesday morning local time.
RT


Marine traffic data shows multiple tugboats as they attempt to dislodge a massive container ship stuck in a narrow section of the Suez Canal. © MarineTraffic.com / screenshot

Some observers also noticed the vessel took a peculiar path as it entered the canal, creating a distinct, if not suggestive, shape on marine tracking maps – what netizens joked was an “intentional drawing” by a trollish captain.

The 193km (120 miles) long Suez Canal is a crucial maritime route and one of the world's busiest waterways. First opened in 1869, it has been repeatedly modernized and expanded since. Some 18,880 ships hauling over 1 billion tons passed through the waterway in 2019. It takes from 12 to 16 hours on average to pass the channel.

Wars closed the canal to traffic on two occasions, in 1956-57 and again in 1967-75, causing massive disruption to global shipping and economies of major countries.

https://www.rt.com/news/518965-ship-stuck-suez-canal/



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