Friday, March 29, 2024

Chinese container blocks Suez Canal as it runs aground





A vast container ship has run aground in the Suez canal after being blown off course by a “gust of wind”, causing a huge traffic jam of vessels at either end of the vital international trade artery.

The 220,000-tonne, 400 metre-long Ever Given – a so-called “mega ship” – became stuck near the southern end of the canal on Tuesday.

Several attempts to refloat it have failed.

Early reports speculated the vessel suffered a loss of power, but the ship’s operator, Evergreen Marine Corp, told Agence-France Presse: “The container accidentally ran aground after a suspected gust of wind hit it.

“The company has urged the shipowner to report the cause of the incident and has been in discussions with relevant parties including the canal management authority to assist the ship as soon as possible.”

Egyptian forecasters said high winds and a sandstorm plagued the area Tuesday, with winds gusting as much as 50 kph (31 mph).

“All crew are safe and accounted for,” said Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement, which manages the Ever Given. “There have been no reports of injuries or pollution.”

The Ever Given is one of a new category of ships called ultra large container ships (ULCS), some of which were even too big for the Panama canal that links the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, according to one trade expert.

The ship, which is carrying hundreds of containers bound for Rotterdam from China, is operated by the Taiwanese shipping company Evergreen and registered in Panama.

Pictures taken from another ship in the canal, the Maersk Denver, show the Ever Given lodged at an angle across the waterway. It dwarfs the tugs sent in by the Egyptian authorities to try to free it, and also a mechanised digger that appeared to be trying to excavate ground in order to free the bow.

Julianne Cona, who posted the picture from the Maersk on Instagram, had watched the drama unfold as her ship waited at anchor.

“Hopefully it won’t be too long but from the looks of it that ship is super stuck,” she wrote. “They had a bunch of tugs trying to pull and push it earlier but it was going nowhere … there is a little excavator trying to dig out the bow.”

She added that after the Ever Given ran aground the ship behind her vessel lost power and “almost hit us so it’s been a fun day”.

Ships have been grounded in the canal before. In 2017, a Japanese ship became stuck but was refloated within hours. A more serious incident occurred near the German port of Hamburg in 2016 when the massive CSCL Indian Ocean ran aground and needed 12 tugs to set it free after five days.

The shipping monitoring site Vesselfinder.com showed the stricken ship surrounded by smaller tugs trying to free it from the banks.

The site also shows the traffic jam of other vessels at either end of the canal. The trade monitor TankerTrackers.com tweeted that there were “a lot of fully-laden” tankers stuck at either end of the canal carrying Saudi, Russian, Omani and US oil.

Normally ships form convoys to traverse the Suez north and south up and down the canal. The Ever Given was part of a northbound convoy when the incident occurred, according to shipping agent GAC.

“The ship was fifth in the northbound convoy. None of the vessels before it were affected, but the 15 behind it were detained at anchorages waiting for the canal to be cleared. The southbound convoy was also blocked,” GAC reported.

The Suez canal is one of the most important waterways in the world and links the Mediterranean with the Red Sea and shipping lanes to Asia. It is 120 miles (190km) long, and 79ft (24m) deep and 673ft (205m) wide. It was expanded in 2015 to enable ships to transit in both directions simultaneously, but only in part of the waterway.

The canal can handle dozens of giant container ships a day so any lengthy holdup could cause serious delays, although shipping experts expected it to be freed quickly.

But Flavio Macau, a senior lecturer in supply chain management at Edith Cowan University in Western Australia, said one problem was that container ships had become much bigger in recent years, too big even for the Panama Canal.

“Moving about 50 ships a day, the impacts of a stranded ship are negligible unless it takes weeks to float it,” he said. “But that is very unlikely and it should be over in a couple of days, tops.”

Mike Schuler, senior editor of the shipping news site gcaptain.com, said it was not clear exactly what had happened but noted that there was a lot of tugs being moved into place to free the Ever Given.

“There are a lot of tugs on the ship but it takes a lot of power to move a ship of that size. The tide schedule could also come into play because you get tides on the canal.”

The canal’s role as a cornerstone of international trade, particularly in oil, led Egyptian president Abdel-Fatah al-Sisi to announce an expansion of the vital waterway in 2014, a mega-project promised as “a gift to the world.”

The canal expansion, intended to allow marine traffic to flow in two directions in the canal, involved deepening and widening 37km of the waterway to cut transit times. The project cost $8bn (£5.2bn at that time), after the Egyptian dictator demanded the project be completed within a year, promising Egyptian citizens that the project would prove to be an “artery of prosperity.” Egypt welcomed world leaders to a grand ceremony marking the reopening of the new canal channel in 2015, amid a wave of nationalist fervour about the project.

Egypt’s Suez Canal Authority pledged that the expansion would double revenues from increased traffic, declaring that the canal would afford Egypt $13.23bn annually by 2023. Last year, revenues fell to $5.61bn, according to the canal authority’s own figures.

According to TankerTrackers, the Ever Given was stuck in part of the canal with only single-lane traffic, rather than the expanded section between the Bitter Lakes and the Mediterranean Sea.

(This piece is courtesy The Guardian).

 


Read More

Support Us
Contribute to see NewsBred grow. And rejoice that your input has made it possible.