Cairo — Marine traffic through the Suez Canal remained blocked on Thursday for the third consecutive day, with dozens of ships stuck at both the north and south entrances to the shortest route between Asia and Africa. One of the world’s largest cargo vessels turned sideways and got stuck across the narrow canal on Tuesday, and one of the teams in charge of dislodging the vessel has said it could take weeks to get freight moving again.
Egypt’s Suez Canal Authority (SCA) announced that navigation through the canal was “temporarily suspended” until the hulking Panamanian-flagged container vessel MV Ever Given can be re-floated.
On Wednesday the SCA allowed 13 ships to enter the canal’s northern end, from the Mediterranean, hoping the Ever Given would be un-stuck quickly and the other cargo vessels would be able to continue on their journeys. But those ships only made it as far as a lake in the middle of the canal, and they may be going nowhere fast.
Egypt is using eight large tugboats and excavation equipment on the banks of the canal, but so far all efforts to refloat the nearly-quarter-of-a-mile-long, 247,000-ton container ship have failed.
The SCA said Thursday that an “alternative scenario” was being adopted, with the vessels that entered the canal from the north on Wednesday “dropping anchor in the Bitter Lakes waiting area, until navigation can be fully resumed.”
Taiwan’s Evergreen Marine Corp, which is operating the ship on a lease on behalf of the Japanese company that owns it, has hired the Dutch firm Smit Salvage and Japan’s Nippon Salvage to work with the vessel’s captain and the Suez Canal Authority to figure out how to re-float it.
Peter Berdowski, CEO of the Dutch company Boskalis that owns Smit Salvage, said Thursday that it was still too early to determine how long the job might take.
“We can’t exclude it might take weeks, depending on the situation,” Berdowski told the Dutch television program “Nieuwsuur,” according to Reuters. Shipping sources told Reuters that if the delays…
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