Africa › Africa       29.03.2021

Joy as megaship refloated, Suez Canal reopens to traffic

This satellite image released by Maxar Technologies shows the operation of tugboats dislodging the MV Ever Given container ship. By - (Satellite image ©2021 Maxar Technologies/AFP)

The MV Ever Given was refloated and the Suez Canal reopened to traffic Monday, sparking relief almost a week after the huge container ship got stuck and blocked a major artery for global trade.

Tugboat crews sounded their foghorns in celebration after the Japanese-owned cargo megaship the length of four football fields was fully dislodged from the banks of the Suez.

World oil prices eased on the news of the reopening of the waterway that connects the Mediterranean and Red Sea and through which more than 10 percent of world trade passes.

The head of the Suez Canal Authority, Admiral Osama Rabie, had around 3pm local time (1300 GMT) "announced the resumption of shipping traffic in the Suez Canal," the authority said.

The SCA cautioned, however, that it will take more than three days to clear the traffic jams of ships that were stuck at the northern and southern ends of the canal.

In the hours before the ship was dislodged, the tailbacks reached 425 vessels.

Maritime data company Lloyd's List said the blockage had held up an estimated $9.6 billion worth of cargo each day between Asia and Europe.

'Thank God'

In the small canal-side village of Manchiyet al-Rougoula, residents watched in amazement as the immense container ship left the bank.

A father and his family climbed to the roof of their red brick house to get a better view of the spectacle as the ship with at least nine levels of containers slowly passed by.

"We are happy to see the boat move (and) thank God," said one resident who asked not to be named.

Egypt has lost some $12-14 million in revenues each day that the ship was stuck, according to the canal authority.

Dutch company Boskalis, which played a key role in the rescue operation, said its "team of experts, working in close collaboration with the Suez Canal Authority, successfully refloated" the ship at 3:05 pm local time.

The operation, carried out under time pressure and "the watchful eye of the world", required 13 tug boats and the dredging of some 30,000 cubic meters of sand, said Peter Berdowski, CEO of Boskalis.

The breakthrough followed what appeared to be a setback. It came moments after reports that the ship had temporarily settled back into the diagonal position it had been stuck in after running aground last Tuesday.

The freed vessel was travelling north toward the Great Bitter Lake, through which the canal passes, "for an inspection of its seaworthiness," said the Taiwan company Evergreen which owns the ship.

"The outcome of that inspection will determine whether the ship can resume its scheduled service."

'Enormous complexity'

The stern of the ship had been dislodged early Monday, sparking immediate praise from Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, even as Boskalis initially warned that the bow would prove more difficult to unwedge.

"Today, Egyptians have been successful in putting to an end the crisis of the stranded ship in the Suez Canal, despite the enormous complexity surrounding the process," Sisi said.

Salvage crews have been working around the clock ever since the accident which has been blamed on high winds and poor visibility during a sandstorm, although the canal authority also cited the possibility of human error.

Rescue teams had focussed on efforts to remove sand around the ship, which was dredged up to a depth of 18 metres (59 feet), SCA spokesman George Safwat said Sunday.

The crisis forced companies to choose between waiting or rerouting vessels around Africa, which adds 9,000 kilometres (5,500 miles) and over a week of travel to the trip between Asia and Europe.

In a sign of the knock-on effects from the Suez blockage, authorities in war-wracked Syria said the crisis had hit its fuel imports from Iran and forced it to ration already scarce supplies.

Romania's animal health agency said 11 ships carrying livestock out of the country were also impacted, while the charity Animals International had warned of a potential "tragedy" affecting some 130,000 animals.

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