The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Container ship clogs Suez Canal: the consequences are likely to be felt in the Port of Hamburg soon

2021-03-25T12:34:34.092Z


The Suez Canal is blocked by a wrecked container ship. The blockage continues. The freighter caused a collision in the port of Hamburg.


The Suez Canal is blocked by a wrecked container ship.

The blockage continues.

The freighter caused a collision in the port of Hamburg.

Update from March 25th, 9:31 am:

The accident of the container

freighter

"Ever Given" in the Suez Canal is also causing trouble in the Port of Hamburg.

The longer the traffic jam lasts, "the quieter it will be in the Port of Hamburg," said Christian Denso, spokesman for the Association of German Shipowners (VDR) to the dpa.

After that, however, the ships would come together.

The "Ever Given" is no stranger to Hamburg.

In 2019 it caused a collision with a ferry.

The freighter went off course on February 9, 2019 and squeezed the Finkenwerder harbor ferry at the Blankenese jetty.

According to the investigations, wind from the southwest had favored the collision.

In addition, a suction pulled the stern of the freighter towards the banks of the Elbe.

Property damage to the amount of around one million euros was incurred on the ferry and the pier.

Suez Canal blockade: Eight tug boats work to free the wrecked container ship

Update from March 24th, 9:52 p.m.:

After a container ship was stranded in the Suez Canal, tug boats managed to move the freighter.

Waiting ships should be allowed to sail again as soon as it is moved to a different position, the shipping and logistics company GAC announced on Wednesday, citing the Egyptian Suez Canal authority.

According to the authorities, the freighter ran aground on Tuesday because the captain had poor visibility due to a sand storm.

According to the Suez Canal Authority, eight tug boats are in use to free the freighter.

However, the wind and the size of the ship make their job difficult, according to the GAC.

According to the ship's radars, it is the freighter "Ever Given".

According to

vesselfinder.com

, it is 400 meters long and almost 59 meters wide.

The ship, built in 2018, is sailing under the Panamanian flag, it came from China and is on its way to Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

According to experts, the freighter is one of the largest container ships in the world.

Suez Canal blockade: "The longer the closure lasts, the more drastic the effects will be"

The Association of German Shipowners (VDR) hopes that the blockade will end as soon as possible.

"The longer the block lasts and the longer the uncertainty lasts, the more drastic the effects of this block will be," said association spokesman Christian Denso of the dpa.

The main problem is that nobody knows whether the detour around the Cape of Good Hope is worthwhile.

The Federation of German Industries warned of rising costs for companies that rely on sea transport.

Supply chains stalled, among other things because of the unpunctual ships, said the deputy chief executive Holger Lösch.

The situation in international container shipping is tense anyway, the blockade is now tightening it again.

Huge container ship wrecked in the Suez Canal

First report from March 24th:

One of the most important waterways in the world is closed in both directions.

On Tuesday, a huge container ship ran aground in the Suez Canal and lay across.

According to AFP, the Taiwanese operator Evergreen Marine cites a gust of wind that drove the freighter off course as a possible reason.

The affected ship, the 400 meter long and 59 meter wide “MV Ever Given”, was en route from China to the Netherlands.

Tugs and excavator vehicles have so far not been able to free the freighter from its deadlock.

According to the Egyptian Suez Canal Authority, it could take days before the shipping route is free again.

In the meantime, a traffic jam of over 100 ships is said to have formed that want to pass the canal.

+

The MV Ever Given lies across the Suez Canal

© Planet Labs Inc./picture alliance / dpa / AP

Suez Canal blockade: Oil prices rise

Oil prices reacted to the glitch on Wednesday.

In the morning, the price of a barrel (159 liters) of Brent North Sea oil rose by 84 cents to $ 61.63 compared to the previous day.

The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) branded American crude rose 62 cents to $ 58.38.

It was only on Tuesday that oil prices reached their lowest level since the beginning of February.

The main cause was concerns about the falling demand for crude oil due to possible economic burdens from rising corona infections, especially in Europe.

The Suez Canal is used by 19,000 ships

The Suez Canal shortens the journey from Asia to Europe via the Red Sea and the Mediterranean.

The passage through the approximately 200 kilometer long canal costs the equivalent of 250,000 euros per ship.

According to the Suez Canal Authority, almost 19,000 ships with a total of over a billion tons of freight passed through the canal last year.

The Suez Canal was only expanded a few years ago.

List of rubric lists: © -

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-03-25

You may like

Trends 24h

News/Politics 2024-04-18T20:25:41.926Z

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.