Tag Archives: Suez

Officials: Grounded ship refloated in Egypt’s Suez Canal

CAIRO (AP) — A cargo ship carrying corn that went aground early on Monday in the Suez Canal was refloated and traffic through the crucial waterway was restored, Egyptian authorities said.

Adm. Ossama Rabei, head of the Suez Canal Authority, said the Marshall Islands-flagged MV Glory suffered a sudden technical failure while transiting through the canal, and the authority deployed four tugboats to help refloat it.

The vessel, which is owned by Greek firm Primera Shipping Inc., was heading to China before it broke down at the 38 kilometer (24 mile) -mark of the canal, near the city of Qantara in the province of Ismailia, he said.

After being refloated, the vessel was towed to a nearby maritime park to fix the problem, Rabei said. The canal’s media office shared images showing the vessel being pulled by tugboats.

Rabei did not elaborate on the nature of the technical failure. Parts of Egypt, including its northern provinces, experienced bad weather Sunday.

Traffic in the canal resumed after the ship was refloated and 51 vessels were expected to pass through the waterway in both directions Monday, Rabei’s statement added.

“Traffic through the Canal was uninterrupted as 26 North-bound vessels are already in the waterway and (a) South-bound convoy will resume its journey right upon the SCA tugboats-assisted transit of MV GLORY,” Rabei said.

Marwa Maher, a media officer with the canal authority, told The Associated Press the vessel ran aground around 5 a.m. local time and was refloated five hours later.

Canal services firm Leth Agencies posted a map that suggested the ship was against the west bank of the canal, pointed south and not wedged across the channel. Satellite tracking data analyzed by the AP showed the Glory running aground in a single-lane stretch of the Suez Canal just south of Port Said on the Mediterranean Sea.

Traffic Marine, a vessel tracking firm, said the Glory, bound to China, was transiting the canal at 8.5 knots when an engine broke down.

The Glory wasn’t the first vessel to run aground in the crucial waterway. The Panama-flagged Ever Given, a colossal container ship, crashed into a bank on a single-lane stretch of the canal in March 2021, blocking the waterway for six days.

The Ever Given was freed in a giant salvage operation by a flotilla of tugboats. The blockage created a massive traffic jam that held up $9 billion a day in global trade and strained supply chains already burdened by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Ever Given debacle prompted Egyptian authorities to begin widening and deepening the waterway’s southern part where the vessel hit ground.

In August, the Singaporean-flagged Affinity V oil tanker ran aground in a single-lane stretch of the canal, blocking the waterway for five hours before it was freed.

The Joint Coordination Center listed the Glory as carrying over 65,000 metric tons of corn from Ukraine bound for China. The vessel was inspected by the center — which includes Russian, Turkish, Ukrainian and United Nations staffers — off Istanbul on Jan. 3.

Opened in 1869, the Suez Canal provides a crucial link for oil, natural gas and cargo. It also remains one of Egypt’s top foreign currency earners. In 2015, President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi ’s government completed a major expansion of the canal, allowing it to accommodate the world’s largest vessels.

Built in 2005, the Glory is 225 meters (738 feet) long and 32 meters (105 feet) wide.

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Associated Press writer Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

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Suez Canal: Affinity V refloated after running aground in Egypt’s canal

The vessel, Affinity V, had been blocking the southern section of the canal, two navigational sources said, but SCA sources said shortly after midnight local time that traffic had returned to normal.

The incident occurred in the same southern, single-lane stretch of the canal where a giant cargo ship, the Ever Given, ran aground for six days in March 2021, disrupting global trade.

According to ship monitoring service TankerTrackers, the Aframax tanker Affinity V seemed to have lost control in the Suez Canal on Wednesday evening while heading south.

“She temporarily clogged up traffic and is now facing south again, but moving slowly by tugboat assistance,” TankerTrackers said on Twitter.

Refinitiv ship-tracking data and the Marine Traffic website also showed the Affinity V facing southwards and traveling slowly in the canal, surrounded by tugs.

The Singapore-flagged tanker was headed for the Red Sea port of Yanbu in Saudi Arabia, the tracking sites said.

After the Ever Given ran aground, the SCA had announced accelerated plans to expand the canal, including extending a second channel that allows shipping to pass in both directions along part of its course and deepening an existing channel.

Work on the expansion is due to be completed in 2023.

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Ship refloated after running aground in Egypt’s Suez Canal -sources

An aerial view of the Gulf of Suez and the Suez Canal are pictured through the window of an airplane on a flight between Cairo and Doha, Egypt, November 27, 2021. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

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CAIRO, Sept 1 (Reuters) – Tug boats refloated a ship that briefly ran aground in Egypt’s Suez Canal late on Wednesday, a source from the Suez Canal Authority (SCA) andstate TV reported.

The vessel had been blocking the southern section of the canal, two navigational sources said, but the SCA source said shortly afterwards that traffic had returned to normal.

There was no immediate statement about the incident from the SCA.

According to ship monitoring service TankerTrackers, the Aframax tanker Affinity V seemed to have lost control in the Suez Canal while heading southbound.

“She temporarily clogged up traffic and is now facing south again, but moving slowly by tugboat assistance,” TankerTrackers said on Twitter.

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Reporting by Yousri Mohamed and Yasmin Hussein; Writing by Aidan Lewis; Editing by Mark Porter and Christian Schmollinger

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Cargo ship runs aground in U.S., a year after sister vessel blocked Suez Canal

March 16 (Reuters) – The Ever Forward container ship is currently grounded in the Chesapeake Bay near Baltimore, according to the U.S. Coast Guard, nearly a year after another ship run by the same company blocked the Suez Canal for six days.

The container ship is operated by Evergreen Marine Corp Taiwan Ltd (2603.TW), the same Taiwanese transportation company that operates the Ever Given. The Ever Given ran aground last March, blocking traffic in the Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest waterways and the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia. read more

The Coast Guard received reports on Sunday that the Ever Forward was grounded and is now conducting checks every four hours to ensure the safety of the crew on board and marine life, according to Petty Officer 3rd Class Breanna Centeno.

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The Coast Guard says the ship is grounded outside of the canal and is not blocking the traffic of other container ships.

Cargo ship runs aground in U.S., a year after sister vessel blocked Suez Canal

Evergreen Marine said in an emailed statement that the incident had not caused a fuel leakage, and did not block the navigation channel or disrupt traffic entering or leaving the port.

“Evergreen is arranging for divers to conduct underwater inspections to confirm any damage to the vessel, and is coordinating with all the concerned parties to refloat the ship as soon as possible,” it said.

“The cause of the incident is under investigation by the competent authority.”

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Reporting by Doyinsola Oladipo in New York; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Kenneth Maxwell

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Ever Given leaves Suez Canal more than 3 months after blockage

CAIRO — The huge container ship that disrupted global marine traffic after it blocked the Suez Canal for nearly a week in March has been released and set sail Wednesday after spending months under seizure.

The 1,400-foot-long Ever Given, which carries cargo between Asia and Europe, ran aground and jammed the single-lane stretch of the canal on March 23 before it was re-floated six days later in a massive salvage operation.

A ceremony was held at the canal to mark the departure of the Panama-flagged ship and television broadcast showed the vessel finally leaving after being stuck in a holding lake in the middle of the Suez Canal for months as canal authorities and the ship owners negotiated a compensation deal after the six-day blockage threw international supply chains into disarray, paralyzing one of the world’s most crucial waterways.

Just days before the ship’s release on Wednesday, it was announced an agreement had been reached, but no details were released.

“I give the permission for the Ever Given to sail,” the Suez Canal Authority Chairman Osama Rabie said at the ceremony. He added that the Suez Canal will continue to service ships of all sizes.

Khaled Abu Bakr, a lawyer for the SCA, said during the ceremony that the canal authorities were “committed to the terms of secrecy” about what was agreed in negotiations with the ship owners.

A spokesperson for the ship’s Japanese owner, Shoei Kisen Kaisha Ltd., said in an emailed statement after the Ever Green set sail that the company will continue to use the canal for its fleet of ships and will remain a “loyal customer.” The company also thanked the crew that stayed on the ship throughout the ordeal and acknowledged the delays for those with cargo stuck onboard.

Journalists on a nearby boat film the Panama-flagged MV ‘Ever Given’ container ship sailing along Egypt’s Suez Canal near the canal’s central city of Ismailia on Wednesday. Mahmoud Khaled / AFP – Getty Images

The compensation is likely to center around the cost of the salvage operation, stalled canal traffic and lost transit fees for the week the Ever Given blocked the canal.

At first, the SCA demanded $916 million in compensation, which was lowered to $550 million in May because of new information about the value of the ship’s cargo. At the time, SCA chief Rabie told Egyptian media the ship owners offered $115 million in compensation.

The two sides have publicly traded blame on which party controlled the speed of the ship in the canal at the time of the incident, which party decided to enter the canal despite heavy winds and the number of tugboats present to escort the ship.

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On Tuesday, a local court officially approved a request from the Suez Canal Authority to lift the Ever Given’s seizure, and allow the ship to leave the canal and complete its journey to the port of Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

About 12 percent of world trade flows through the Suez Canal, a narrow, man-made canal dividing continental Africa from the Asian Sinai Peninsula. The canal usually allows 50 cargo ships to pass daily between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, providing a vital trade corridor between Europe and Asia.

The Ever Given blockage had brought the key global trade route to a standstill and captured global attention as the world watched as dredgers worked non-stop to dislodge the stranded vessel, shifting huge quantities of sand, with experts initially fearing it could take weeks to completely free it.

Hundreds of ships had to wait for the canal to be unblocked, creating a maritime traffic jam visible from space, while some ships pondered taking the much longer route around the Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s southern tip.

Charlene Gubash reported from Cairo, Yuliya Talmazan from London.

The Associated Press contributed.

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Egypt’s first female captain falsely blamed for blocking Suez Canal

Egypt’s first female ship captain says she was wrongly blamed for the Suez Canal debacle — which occurred while she was on a different vessel hundreds of miles away.

Marwa Elselehdar, 29, was at sea as the first mate in command of the Aida IV in Alexandria when the massive Ever Given container ship became accidentally stuck in the waterway, the BBC reported.

SUEZ CANAL SHIP’S CREW CELEBRATES ON VIDEO AFTER EVER GIVEN IS FREED

But online rumors and fake news headlines spread that she was behind the maritime disaster, which held up the major shipping route for nearly a week before the Ever Given was freed.

“I was shocked. I felt that I might be targeted maybe because I’m a successful female in this field or because I’m Egyptian, but I’m not sure,” she told the outlet.

The captain of the Ever Given has not been revealed, but Egyptian officials have said that human error may have caused the ship to run aground last month.

Elselehdar — who does not work for the shipping company — said the rumors about her involvement appeared to be driven by a screenshot of a doctored Arab News headline.

“This fake article was in English, so it spread in other countries,” Elselehdar told the BBC. “I tried so hard to negate what was in the article because it was affecting my reputation and all the efforts I exerted to be where I am now.”

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The bogus story prompted trolls to come after her, too.

“The comments on the article were very negative and harsh, but there were so many other supportive comments from ordinary people and people I work with,” she said.

“My message to females who want to be in the maritime field is fight for what you love and not let any negativity to affect you,” she said.

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Egypt’s Marwa Elselehdar falsely blamed for Suez Canal mess

Egypt’s first female ship captain says she was wrongly blamed for the Suez Canal debacle — which occurred while she was on a different vessel hundreds of miles away.

Marwa Elselehdar, 29, was at sea as the first mate in command of the Aida IV in Alexandria when the massive Ever Given container ship became accidentally stuck in the waterway, the BBC reported.

But online rumors and fake news headlines spread that she was behind the maritime disaster, which held up the major shipping route for nearly a week before the Ever Given was freed.

“I was shocked. I felt that I might be targeted maybe because I’m a successful female in this field or because I’m Egyptian, but I’m not sure,” she told the outlet.

The captain of the Ever Given has not been revealed, but Egyptian officials have said that human error may have caused the ship to run aground last month.

A worker waves the Egyptian flag as the “Ever Given” container ship operated by the Evergreen Marine Corporation, sails with tugboats through the Suez Canal, after it was fully freed and floated.
picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

Elselehdar — who does not work for the shipping company — said the rumors about her involvement appeared to be driven by a screenshot of a doctored Arab News headline.

“This fake article was in English, so it spread in other countries,” Elselehdar told the BBC.

“I tried so hard to negate what was in the article because it was affecting my reputation and all the efforts I exerted to be where I am now.”

The bogus story prompted trolls to come after her, too.

“The comments on the article were very negative and harsh, but there were so many other supportive comments from ordinary people and people I work with,” she said.

“My message to females who want to be in the maritime field is fight for what you love and not let any negativity to affect you,” she said.

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Experts examine bottom of big ship that was stuck in Suez

CAIRO (AP) — Divers inspected the underside of a colossal container ship that had blocked the Suez Canal, spotting some damage to the bow but not enough to take it out of service, officials said Wednesday.

The dives were part of a continuing investigation into what caused the Ever Given to crash into the bank of the canal where it remained wedged for six days, blocking a crucial artery of global shipping, before it was dislodged on Monday. The vessel is now anchored in the Great Bitter Lake, a wide stretch of water halfway between the north and south ends of the canal.

The blockage had halted billions of dollars a day in maritime commerce.

Two senior canal officials said the vessel’s bulbous bow had suffered slight to medium damage. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

One of the officials, a canal pilot, said experts were studying the extent of the damage, but he said it is unlikely it would impede navigation. He said the ship’s next movements would depend on “several legal and procedural” measures that the canal authority would discuss with Ever Given’s operator.

When blame gets assigned, it will likely lead to years of litigation to recoup the costs of repairing the ship, fixing the canal and reimbursing those who saw their cargo shipments disrupted. The vessel is owned by a Japanese firm, operated by a Taiwanese shipper, flagged in Panama and now stuck in Egypt, so matters could quickly become complicated.

Since the canal reopened for traffic on Monday afternoon, convoys of ships have been moving through the waterway which links the Mediterranean and the Red Sea.

A maritime traffic jam had grown on both ends of the canal during the six days of blockage. From the reopening to noon Wednesday, more than 160 vessels had passed through the canal.

Lt. Gen. Ossama Rabei, head of the canal authority, said Wednesday they would work around the clock to clear the backlog on either end of the canal.

Dislodging the Ever Given was a moment of triumph for the members of the salvage team. Some broke into tears, many hugged each other as the vessel’s bow was rooted out from the eastern side of the canal.

“We saw it on television, and it is completely different than when you see it in front of you,” said on of the men, Mostafa Mohamed.

The unprecedented canal shutdown had added to the strain on the shipping industry, already under pressure from the pandemic.

The six-day closure would “create a domino effect of delays for goods to be delivered and for the backlog of shipments to be processed through, said Diego Pantoja-Navajas, an expert in supply chain logistics and vice president of WMS Cloud Development, Oracle.

“Over 144 hours lost in the supply chain network,” said Pantoja-Navajas, “will create a domino effect of delays for goods to be delivered and for the backlog of shipments to be processed through.”

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Associated Press video journalist Mohammed Wagdy in Ismailia, Egypt, contributed to this report.

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Suez Canal Opens, but Shipping Will Be Snarled for Months

The bridge of the oil tanker Navig8 Aronaldo erupted in cheers after Capt. Malik Naushad told his crew to prepare to weigh anchor midnight Tuesday and start their voyage out of the Suez Canal, where they had been stuck for six days by the grounding of the Ever Given.

Back at the German offices of Jan Held, whose family firm has three different ships stuck at Suez, the mood wasn’t as jubilant. Watching a live feed of the Ever Given move off the bank, Mr. Held knew that uncorking the biggest traffic jam in global shipping in recent years could take a long time to resolve, and set off a scramble for berths and clear routes.

“You see a lot of bizarre things in shipping,” said Mr. Held, a former ship’s captain himself and co-owner of Held Bereederungs GmbH & Co KG, based in the north German city of Haren. “But with this, you knew it would have repercussions around the world.”

Late Tuesday, ships were again moving through the Suez Canal, a day after engineers freed the Ever Given, a 1,300-foot container ship, and cleared the waterway for global traffic. Osama Rabie, chairman of the Suez Canal Authority, which runs the 120-mile shipping route, said at a press conference that 113 ships had crossed in both directions since the route reopened late Monday, and another 95 are expected to pass through in the evening, up from the typical 50 or so daily passages. 

Egyptian officials say the logjam will be cleared in three to four days. Shipping executives say it will take days longer. Leth Agencies, a ship’s services provider in the Suez, said 352 vessels are still awaiting transit.

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Suez Canal ship blockage under investigation

Experts are looking into how a colossal cargo ship became wedged across Egypt’s Suez Canal, where the vessel blocked traffic and disrupted billions of dollars in international trade for nearly a week.

While the Ever Given, which is about as long as the Empire State Building is tall, was freed Monday and traffic has since resumed in the channel that links the Mediterranean and Red seas, it’s still unclear what went wrong.

SUEZ CANAL SHIP’S CREW CELEBRATES ON VIDEO AFTER EVER GIVEN IS FREED

Experts boarded the massive vessel on Tuesday as it idled in Egypt’s Great Bitter Lake, just north of the site where it had blocked the canal and halted billions of dollars a day in maritime commerce.

A senior canal pilot, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to journalists, told The Associated Press that experts were looking for signs of damage and trying to determine why the vessel ran aground.

The cargo ship MV Ever Given was freed in the Suez Canal near Suez, Egypt, on Monday. Experts are now investigating what caused the massive vessel to run aground. (©Maxar Technologies via AP)

The ship’s owner, Japanese firm Shoei Kisen Kaisha Ltd., said Tuesday that it would be part of the investigation along with other parties, though it did not identify them by name. It also refused to discuss what factors could have caused the grounding, including the ship’s speed and the high winds, saying it could not comment on an ongoing investigation.

The company said that any damage to the ship was believed to be mostly on its keel. It said it was not immediately known whether the vessel will be repaired on-site in Egypt or elsewhere, or whether it will eventually head to its initial destination of Rotterdam. That is a decision to be made by its operator, rather than the ship owner, the company said.

The vessel is operated by a Taiwanese shipper.

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Even as traffic began to flow through the canal once more, a canal service provider said more than 300 vessels carrying everything from crude oil to cattle were still waiting for their turn in a process that will take days. 

Analysts expect it could take at least another 10 days to clear the backlog — though Egypt’s president said Tuesday it would take just three. The losses to shippers, as well as any physical damage to the vessel itself, likely will see lawsuits.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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