Tag Archives: vessel

Superyacht: Race to prevent oil spill after fire-ravaged vessel sinks | UK News

The race is on to prevent a massive oil spill off the coast of Devon after a superyacht caught fire and sank.

The 85ft vessel had been carrying around 8,000 litres of fuel when it was engulfed by flames while moored at Torquay on Saturday.

Witnesses said that the fire burnt through the rope mooring the yacht, cutting it adrift so it floated along the marina before hitting a bridge, which acted like a barricade.

Nobody was injured but the boat sank at about 6pm.

The Environment Agency is now handling the case and officers issued two pollution alerts for the beaches closest to the marina on Saturday.

It is understood that more pollution recovery equipment will arrive today from Birmingham.

An Environment Agency spokesperson said: “Our officers are providing assistance to the Harbour Master Authority (HMA) to contain the oil and fuel within the booms that have been set up in the marina.

“The Environment Agency will be providing further advice in the coming days to the HMA on waste management as part of efforts to recover the sunken yacht.”

Image:
Residents and visitors were asked to avoid the area and keep doors and windows shut. Pic: Mike Trower

Torquay-based musician David Balmer, 58, told the PA news agency: “They’re worried about the fuel getting into the water and into the harbour, which is obviously the last thing you want.

“There were masses of people around. It was engulfed in flames and there was this huge cloud of black smoke.

“It was quite a spectacle, it was just an unbelievable sight.”

Image:
The vessel became engulfed in flames while moored at Torquay. Pic: Tania Coatham

Devon and Cornwall Police said the cause of the fire was being treated as unexplained and inquiries were continuing.

Torquay Marina said in a statement: “Due to a fantastic team effort by the emergency services, harbour authorities, my staff and our customers, we were able to contain the emergency situation and avoid a major catastrophe.

“We now have several booms around the area to protect the environment. Please continue to be patient during the clean-up process.”

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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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Antibodies induced by mRNA shots improve for months; blood cells damaged by COVID cause blood vessel problems

By Nancy Lapid

(Reuters) – The following is a summary of some recent studies on COVID-19. They include research that warrants further study to corroborate the findings and that has yet to be certified by peer review.

Antibodies improve for months after mRNA vaccine

Antibodies induced by mRNA COVID-19 vaccines keep improving in quality for at least six months while the immune system continues to “train” its antibody-producing B cells, according to a new study.

After vaccination, some B cells become short-lived antibody-producing cells, while others join “germinal centers” in lymph nodes – essentially, a training camp where they mature and perfect their skills. “Cells that successfully graduate (from germinal centers) can become long-lived antibody-producing cells that live in our bone marrow or ‘memory B cells’ that are ready to engage if the person gets infected,” explained Ali Ellebedy of Washington University in St. Louis. Animal studies have suggested that so-called germinal center reactions last only weeks. But analyses of blood, lymph node tissue and bone marrow from volunteers who received the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine showed germinal center reactions induced by the shots lasted at least six months, with antibodies becoming increasingly better at recognizing and attacking the spike protein of the original version of SARS-CoV-2, Ellebedy’s team reported on Tuesday in Nature https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-04527-1.

They did not test the mature antibodies’ ability to neutralize variants, but in theory, Ellebedy said, the antibodies should be better able to recognize parts of the spike common to the variants and the original strain. More research is needed to know whether this robust germinal center response is unique to mRNA vaccines or if it is also induced by more traditional vaccines.

Red blood cells damaged by COVID cause blood-vessel problems

Dysfunctional red blood cells contribute to the blood vessel injuries common in severe COVID-19, according to laboratory studies that also may suggest a way to treat the problem.

Many patients hospitalized for COVID-19 are thought to have damage to the endothelial cells lining the blood vessels, which can lead to blood clots, organ impairment, and other complications. New findings from the blood of 17 moderately ill COVID-19 patients and 27 healthy volunteers confirm “profound and persistent endothelial dysfunction” as an effect of the coronavirus, researchers reported on Wednesday in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology https://www.jacc.org/doi/abs/10.1016/j.jacbts.2021.12.003. Compared to the red blood cells in healthy people, those from COVID-19 patients release fewer beneficial nitric oxide molecules and more detrimental inflammation-causing molecules, said Dr. Ali Mahdi of Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm. In combination with elevated levels of a certain enzyme, the inflammatory molecules injure the blood-vessel lining, his team found. As a result, the vessel cannot relax properly.

The dysfunction is reversed by drugs that restore normal enzyme levels and limit production of the harmful molecules, Mahdi said. Whether test-tube findings can be replicated in people is not yet clear. The experiment was performed on the original coronavirus, so it is also unclear whether red blood cells are similarly affected in infections caused by variants of SARS-CoV-2.

Global project helps low-income countries reuse N95 masks

An international group of physicists, engineers and physicians has designed a cheap, easy-to-construct cabinet with ultraviolet-C (UV-C) bulbs that has allowed health clinics in lower-income countries to decontaminate and reuse over 900,000 protective N95 masks.

The prototype was constructed using a metal office storage cabinet lined with household aluminum foil, with UV-C bulbs at the front and back, consortium members reported on Wednesday in NEJM Catalyst https://catalyst.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/CAT.21.0439. “You simply load the masks on a rack, put them in the cabinet, shut the doors and turn the device on to apply the right dose of UV-C to inactivate the COVID-19 virus,” said Dr. Nicole Starr, a surgery trainee at the University of California, San Francisco who led the effort. The process takes about 10 minutes. Once the group had a workable design, they recruited members of local student chapters of the optics society Optica to build the cabinets, sometimes working with embassies to arrange for shipments of the necessary components. Engineering teams in nine countries and hospitals in 12 countries worked on the project.

“Overall, 21 cabinets were put into use in hospitals, and we estimate that 930,000 N95s were decontaminated for reuse from July 2020 to January 2022,” Starr said. Decontamination equipment currently used in U.S. hospitals can cost $80,000 per unit, according to the report. The team estimated that their cabinet can be built for about $500 to $1,500 depending on location and can process nearly 5,000 masks per day at maximum capacity.

Click for a Reuters graphic https://tmsnrt.rs/3c7R3Bl on vaccines in development.

(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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At Least 10 Dead After Spanish Fishing Vessel Sinks in Atlantic

A Spanish fishing boat carrying 24 people sank early Tuesday hundreds of miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, leaving at least 10 people dead and more than a dozen missing, according to Canadian and Spanish maritime officials.

Three people were rescued by another fishing boat that was nearby when the 164-foot vessel, called the Villa de Pitanxo, sank, Spain’s maritime rescue service said in a statement.

The survivors had made it into a life raft, which also held the bodies of four members of the crew. The bodies of three other crew members were later found in the water, said Lt. Cmdr. Brian Owens, a spokesman at the Joint Task Force Atlantic and Joint Rescue Coordination Center in Halifax, Nova Scotia. An additional three bodies were found later in the day, according to Spanish maritime officials.

The boat had been based in the Galician town of Marín, in northwestern Spain. María Ramallo, the mayor, told reporters that the sinking was “a tragedy on a scale that we cannot remember.”

Search and rescue crews had encountered rough water, reduced visibility and windy conditions at sea, Spanish officials said.

The boat was carrying 16 Spaniards, five Peruvians and three Ghanaians, according to the rescue service. The boat sank about 280 miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Spanish officials said on Twitter.

Two helicopters, a plane, and Spanish and Portuguese fishing boats were involved in the search, officials said.

The Halifax rescue center said it received an emergency signal just after midnight on Tuesday from the Villa de Pitanxo. The signal indicated the boat was east of St. John’s, the capital of Newfoundland and Labrador. A helicopter, another aircraft and several vessels were deployed.

Commander Owens said rescuers remained hopeful that they could still find crew members alive. They may have managed to put on survival suits before the ship sank or found debris or a lifeboat to cling to, he said.

“We never rule out the human spirit,” he said. “People find ways to survive.”

The fishing boat itself has not been found, he said.

“The North Atlantic is formidable, especially in the winter,” said Fred Anstey, the head of the School of Maritime Studies at the Marine Institute at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Many other vessels, including fishing boats, have been lost over the years, he said.

One of the biggest disasters at sea occurred in 1982, when the Ocean Ranger, a drilling rig on the Grand Banks off the coast of Newfoundland, capsized after it was pounded by 65-foot waves. Eighty-four people were killed, Mr. Anstey said.

The high winds and rough seas described by rescuers on Tuesday are “very common weather for this time of year,” Mr. Anstey said.

Sea temperatures are usually around the freezing mark, Mr. Anstey said. Factoring in the wind conditions, he said, survival time “is often measured in minutes.”

In Spain, officials and relatives of the crew members were anxious for more updates about the rescue efforts.

“We remain distressed by the terrible news out of Canada about the sinking of the Villa de Pitanxo,” Alberto Núñez Feijóo, the regional president of Galicia, said on Twitter. “We are making available to the government and the shipowner all the help they need.”

Maica Larriba, a local official in Galicia, said on Tuesday that contact with the vessel was lost around 5 a.m. in Spain.

In a separate news conference, Isabel Rodríguez García, the minister for territorial policy and the spokeswoman of the Spanish government, confirmed the rescue of three crew members, but said she could not comment further.

“We are following with worry and preoccupation the rescue operations,” she said.

The boat was built in 2004, according to Vesselfinder, a website for tracking marine traffic.

The ship’s owner is a fishing company, Grupo Nores, that specializes in fishing cod, dog fish and other species found in the North Atlantic, according to Spanish media reports.

Elisabeth Calderón, the aunt of one of the sailors, Jonathan Calderón, told local reporters that his ship had been at sea for over a month. Mr. Calderón has a wife and two adolescent children, his aunt said.

His wife was traveling when the shipwreck occurred, she said.

“Imagine when the family found out,” Ms. Calderón said.

Carlos Ordóñez, a sailor whose nephew was on board the ship, said the family was “completely overwhelmed.”

“We don’t know if they are alive or dead,” he said.

Jesus Jiménez contributed reporting.



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Yemen: Houthis seize UAE vessel carrying ‘military supplies’ | Houthis News

Saudi-led coalition says the vessel was carrying medical equipment when it was seized off the coast of Hodeidah.

Yemen’s Houthi fighters say they have seized a UAE-flagged vessel in the Red Sea, claiming it carried “military supplies” after the Saudi-led coalition accused the armed group of “piracy”.

The vessel “entered Yemeni waters without authorisation” off the coast of Hodeidah and was carrying out “hostile acts”, the Houthi military spokesman Yahia Saree said on Twitter on Monday.

The seizure of the Rwabee marks the latest assault in the Red Sea, a crucial route for international trade and energy shipments.

First word of the Rwabee’s seizure came from the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations, which only said an attack targeted an unnamed vessel around midnight.

The coordinates it offered corresponded to the Emirati-flagged landing craft Rwabee, which had not given its location via satellite-tracking data for hours, according to the website MarineTraffic.com.

Hours later, a statement from the Saudi-led coalition, carried by state media in the kingdom, acknowledged the attack, saying the Houthis had committed an act of “armed piracy” involving the vessel.

The coalition asserted the ship carried medical equipment from a dismantled Saudi field hospital in the distant island of Socotra.

“The Houthi militia must immediately release the ship, otherwise the coalition forces shall take all necessary measures and procedures to deal with this violation, including the use of force,” Brigadier-General Turki al-Malki said in a statement on Monday.

In 2016, Emirati vessel SWIFT-1, which had been sailing back and forth in the Red Sea between an Emirati troop base in Eritrea and Yemen, was attacked by Houthi forces.

The Emirati government asserted that the SWIFT-1 carried humanitarian aid. UN experts later said of the claim that they were “unconvinced of its veracity”.

Yemen was plunged into chaos in 2014 when Houthi rebels seized control of the capital Sanaa. A coalition, led by Saudi Arabia, intervened in 2015 in support of the government.

During the conflict, which has killed tens of thousands and pushed Yemen to the brink of famine, the Saudi-led coalition has launched thousands of air raids inside Yemen that also hit markets, schools and hospitals. Houthi forces have regularly sent drones and fired missiles into Saudi Arabian cities.

Some four million people have been internally displaced during the fighting. In September, the World Food Programme warned that 16 million Yemenis were “marching towards starvation”.



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High blood pressure: Blueberry juice could improve blood vessel function and blood pressur

High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, is a pernicious condition that gradually puts strain on the heart, preventing it from carrying out its role efficiently. This predisposes individuals to heart attack and stroke. Thankfully, certain fruits have powerful blood-pressure-lowering effects. One drink, in particular, could slash the risk of cardiovascular disease by improving blood pressure and blood vessel function.

Blueberries have garnered a lot of attention in medical circles for their unparalleled health benefits.

According to one study by the Journal of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, the fruit could improve vascular health too.

Researchers found that consuming just 200 grams of blueberries could help lower systolic blood pressure and improve blood vessel health.

They studied these effects after offering wild blueberry drinks to a sample of 40 men every day for a month.

READ MORE: Hypertension diet: The 3p food that helps lower blood pressure – ‘packed with nutrients’

Other participants received a control drink, for comparison purposes.

The subjects had their blood pressure measured at regular intervals and underwent tests measuring flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery in the upper arms.

This allows an idea of how much the artery widens as blood flow increases.

Findings revealed flow-mediated dilation improved by about two percent within two hours of consuming the blueberry drink and the effect was sustained after one month of daily consumption.

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Also, systolic pressure fell by an average of 5 millimetres of mercury.

Systolic pressure is one of the two components used to measure blood pressure.

The bottom number is diastolic blood pressure, the lowest level your blood pressure reaches between beats, according to Blood Bressure UK.

The top number, systolic pressure, is more important because it gives a better idea of your risk of having a stroke or heart attack.

“The effect was similar to that from common blood pressure drugs over the same period,” noted Harvard Health.

The researchers put the effects down to the blueberries high levels of anthocyanin – a unique antioxidant found predominantly in berries.

These molecules are what give the berries their rich colours, with blueberries known for having the highest amount.

“The research also showed that anthocyanin improves the function of endothelial cells in the body,” continued Harvard Health.

These cells, found in the inner surface of vessels, are essential for blood flow and blood pressure regulation.

The team suggested this process could help prevent the development of hypertension.

The lead author of the study, doctor Ana Rodriguez-Mateos, from the Department of Nutritional Science at King’s College London, said: “Although it is best to eat the whole blueberry to get the full benefit, our study finds that the majority of the effects can be explained by anthocyanins.

“If the changes we saw in blood vessel function after eating blueberry every day could be sustained for a person’s whole life, it could reduce the risk of developing cardiovascular disease by up to 20 percent.”



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British navy group: Hijackers have left vessel off UAE coast

FUJAIRAH, United Arab Emirates — The hijackers who captured a vessel off the coast of the United Arab Emirates in the Gulf of Oman departed the targeted ship on Wednesday, the British navy reported, as recorded radio traffic appeared to reveal a crew member onboard saying Iranian gunmen had stormed the asphalt tanker.

The incident — described by the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations the night before as a “potential hijack” — revived fears of an escalation in Mideast waters and ended with as much mystery as it began.

Hints of what unfolded on the Panama-flagged asphalt tanker, called Asphalt Princess, began to emerge with the maritime radio recording, obtained by commodities pricing firm Argus Media and shared with The Associated Press. In the audio, a crew member can be heard telling the Emirati coast guard that five or six armed Iranians had boarded the tanker.

“Iranian people are onboard with ammunition,” the crew member says. “We are … now, drifting. We cannot tell you exact our ETA to (get to) Sohar,” the port in Oman listed on the vessel’s tracker as its destination. It was not clear whether the crew members, whom he identified as Indian and Indonesian, were in immediate danger.

No one took responsibility for the brief seizure, which underscored mounting tensions as Iran and the United States seek a resolution to their standoff over Tehran’s tattered 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Apparently responding to the incident, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh on Tuesday denied that Iran played any role. He described the recent maritime attacks in the Persian Gulf as “completely suspicious.”

Over the past years, the rising tensions have played out in the waters of the Persian Gulf, where just last week a drone attack on an oil tanker linked to an Israeli billionaire off the coast of Oman killed two crew members. The West blamed Iran for the raid, which marked the first known fatal assault in the yearslong shadow war targeting vessels in Mideast waters. Iran denied involvement.

Late on Tuesday, the intruders boarded the Asphalt Princess sailing off the coast of Fujairah, authorities said. The official news agency of Oman’s military said it received reports that the Asphalt Princess had been hijacked and immediately dispatched Royal Air Force maritime patrol aircraft and naval vessels “to contribute to securing international waters.”

In the recorded radio traffic, when the Emirati coast guard asks the crew member what the Iranian gunmen were doing onboard, he says he “cannot understand the (Iranians),” his voice muffled, before trying to hand over the radio to someone else. The call then cuts off.

Possible signs of trouble began to emerge that evening when six oil tankers off the coast of Fujairah announced around the same time via their Automatic Identification System trackers that they were “not under command,” according to MarineTraffic.com. That typically means a vessel has lost power and can no longer steer.

Satellite-tracking data for the Asphalt Princess had showed it gradually heading toward Iranian waters off the port of Jask early Wednesday, according to MarineTraffic.com. Hours later, however, it stopped and changed course toward Oman, just before the British navy group declared the hijackers had departed and the vessel was now “safe.”

The owner of the Asphalt Princess, listed as Emirati free zone-based Glory International, could not immediately be reached for comment.

The U.S. military’s Mideast-based 5th Fleet and the British Defense Ministry also did not respond to requests for comment. The Emirati government did not immediately acknowledge the incident.

The Gulf of Oman sits near the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a fifth of all traded oil passes. Fujairah, on the UAE’s eastern coast, is a main port in the region for ships to take on new oil cargo, pick up supplies or trade out crew.

For the past two years, after then-President Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from Iran’s nuclear deal in 2018 and imposed crushing sanctions, the waters off Fujairah have witnessed a series of explosions and hijackings. The U.S. Navy has blamed Iran for a series of limpet mine attacks on vessels that damaged tankers.

In the summer of 2019, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard troops detained a British-flagged tanker, the Stena Impero, near the Strait of Hormuz. Last year, an oil tanker sought by the U.S. for allegedly circumventing sanctions on Iran was hijacked off the Emirati coast and later ended up in Iran, though Tehran never acknowledged the incident.

And in January, armed Iranian Revolutionary Guard troops stormed a South Korean tanker and forced the ship to change course and travel to Iran. While Iran claimed it detained the ship over pollution concerns, it appeared to link the seizure to negotiations over billions of dollars in Iranian assets frozen in South Korean banks.

———

DeBre reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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First ship passes through Suez Canal after cargo vessel freed

The first cargo ship has successfully passed through the entirety of the Suez Canal since the waterway reopened after a nearly-weeklong shutdown due to the grounding of the massive cargo vessel “Ever Given.”

The New York Times reported that a Hong Kong-flagged cargo ship identified as the “YM Wish” was the first vessel allowed through the canal and exited the southern end headed for the port of Jeddah around 9:15 p.m. EDT in the U.S. It was headed to the Red Sea and Jedda, the Saudi Arabian port city.

A ship tracking website, MarineTraffic.com, counted numerous ships traveling through the canal Monday evening following the YM Wish’s successful voyage. 

The Suez had been closed since last Tuesday after the Ever Given became grounded in the waterway at a perpendicular angle, successfully blocking traffic in both directions. Workers in tugboats, dredgers and excavators labored for nearly a week to free the vessel, which was finally refloated early Monday with the help of a higher-than usual high tide.

A Navy spokesperson acknowledged on Sunday that the growing backlog of vessels and the canal’s closure was having an unspecified impact on U.S. Naval efforts, while an analysis first reported by CNBC last week estimated that $400 million in global trade was being delayed every hour that the Suez was closed.



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Suez Canal remains blocked amid efforts to free stuck vessel

SUEZ, Egypt (AP) — A giant container ship remained stuck sideways in Egypt’s Suez Canal for a fifth day Saturday, as authorities prepared to make new attempts to free the vessel and reopen a crucial east-west waterway for global shipping.

The Ever Given, a Panama-flagged ship that carries cargo between Asia and Europe, ran aground Tuesday in the narrow canal that runs between Africa and the Sinai Peninsula.

The massive vessel got stuck in a single-lane stretch of the canal, about six kilometers (3.7 miles) north of the southern entrance, near the city of Suez.

Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement, the technical manager of the Ever Given, said an attempt Friday to free it failed. Plans were in the works to pump water from interior spaces of the vessel, and two more tugs should arrive by Sunday to join others already trying to move the massive ship, it said.

An official at the Suez Canal Authority said they planned to make at least two attempts Saturday to free the vessel when the high tide goes down. He said the timing depends on the tide.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief journalists.

Egyptian authorities have prohibited media access to the site. The canal authority said its head, Lt. Gen. Osama Rabei, would hold a news conference Saturday in the city of Suez, a few kilometers (miles) from the site of the vessel.

Shoei Kisen President Yukito Higaki told a news conference at company headquarters in Imabari in western Japan that 10 tugboats were deployed and workers were dredging the banks and sea floor near the vessel’s bow to try to get it afloat again as the high tide starts to go out.

Shoei Kisen said in a statement Saturday the company was considering removing containers to lighten the vessel if refloating efforts fail, but that would be a difficult operation.

The White House said it has offered to help Egypt reopen the canal. “We have equipment and capacity that most countries don’t have and we’re seeing what we can do and what help we can be,” President Joe Biden told reporters Friday.

An initial investigation showed the vessel ran aground due to strong winds and ruled out mechanical or engine failure, the company and the canal authority said. GAC, a global shipping and logistics company, had previously said the ship had experienced a power blackout, but it did not elaborate.

A maritime traffic jam grew to around 280 vessels Saturday outside the Suez Canal, according to canal service provider Leth Agencies.

Some vessels began changing course and dozens of ships were still en route to the waterway, according to the data firm Refinitiv.

A prolonged closure of the crucial waterway would cause delays in the global shipment chain. Some 19,000 vessels passed through the canal last year, according to official figures. About 10% of world trade flows through the canal, which is particularly crucial for transporting oil. The closure could affect oil and gas shipments to Europe from the Middle East.

It remained unclear how long the blockage would last. Even after reopening the canal that links factories in Asia to consumers in Europe, the waiting containers are likely to arrive at busy ports, forcing them to face additional delays before offloading.

Apparently anticipating long delays, the owners of the stuck vessel diverted a sister ship, the Ever Greet, on a course around Africa instead, according to satellite data.

Others also are being diverted. The liquid natural gas carrier Pan Americas changed course in the mid-Atlantic, now aiming south to go around the southern tip of Africa, according to satellite data from MarineTraffic.com.

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Suez Canal remains blocked amid efforts to free stuck vessel

SUEZ, Egypt (AP) — A giant container ship remained stuck sideways in Egypt’s Suez Canal for a fifth day Saturday, as authorities prepared to make new attempts to free the vessel and reopen a crucial east-west waterway for global shipping.

The Ever Given, a Panama-flagged ship that carries cargo between Asia and Europe, ran aground Tuesday in the narrow canal that runs between Africa and the Sinai Peninsula.

The massive vessel got stuck in a single-lane stretch of the canal, about six kilometers (3.7 miles) north of the southern entrance, near the city of Suez.

Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement, the technical manager of the Ever Given, said an attempt Friday to free it failed. Plans were in the works to pump water from interior spaces of the vessel, and two more tugs should arrive by Sunday to join others already trying to move the massive ship, it said.

An official at the Suez Canal Authority said they planned to make at least two attempts Saturday to free the vessel when the high tide goes down. He said the timing depends on the tide.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief journalists.

Egyptian authorities have prohibited media access to the site. The canal authority said its head, Lt. Gen. Osama Rabei, would hold a news conference Saturday in the city of Suez, a few kilometers (miles) from the site of the vessel.

Shoei Kisen President Yukito Higaki told a news conference at company headquarters in Imabari in western Japan that 10 tugboats were deployed and workers were dredging the banks and sea floor near the vessel’s bow to try to get it afloat again as the high tide starts to go out.

Shoei Kisen said in a statement Saturday the company was considering removing containers to lighten the vessel if refloating efforts fail, but that would be a difficult operation.

The White House said it has offered to help Egypt reopen the canal. “We have equipment and capacity that most countries don’t have and we’re seeing what we can do and what help we can be,” President Joe Biden told reporters Friday.

An initial investigation showed the vessel ran aground due to strong winds and ruled out mechanical or engine failure, the company and the canal authority said. GAC, a global shipping and logistics company, had previously said the ship had experienced a power blackout, but it did not elaborate.

A maritime traffic jam grew to around 280 vessels Saturday outside the Suez Canal, according to canal service provider Leth Agencies.

Some vessels began changing course and dozens of ships were still en route to the waterway, according to the data firm Refinitiv.

A prolonged closure of the crucial waterway would cause delays in the global shipment chain. Some 19,000 vessels passed through the canal last year, according to official figures. About 10% of world trade flows through the canal, which is particularly crucial for transporting oil. The closure could affect oil and gas shipments to Europe from the Middle East.

It remained unclear how long the blockage would last. Even after reopening the canal that links factories in Asia to consumers in Europe, the waiting containers are likely to arrive at busy ports, forcing them to face additional delays before offloading.

Apparently anticipating long delays, the owners of the stuck vessel diverted a sister ship, the Ever Greet, on a course around Africa instead, according to satellite data.

Others also are being diverted. The liquid natural gas carrier Pan Americas changed course in the mid-Atlantic, now aiming south to go around the southern tip of Africa, according to satellite data from MarineTraffic.com.

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