Suez Canal Clogged After Giant Ship Runs Aground

Ever Given, a quarter-mile long, ran aground in the busy Egyptian waterway, causing a traffic jam of at least 100 vessels.
LOADINGERROR LOADING

The Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest and most important waterways, has been gridlocked since Tuesday morning after a giant container ship ran aground in the canal.

Photos shared on social media showed Ever Given, a quarter-mile-long vessel carrying hundreds of containers from China to Rotterdam, stuck lengthways across the waterway. Attempts to refloat the enormous ship have failed.

Update: still stuck.

How big is this #SuezCanal plug? Ultra big.

MV #EVERGIVEN
Size: 400m long / 59m wide
Gross tonnage: 219,079
Capacity: 20,388 TEUs (20ft container equivalents).

One of the largest container ships in operation. pic.twitter.com/rJunpJrAKE

— John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) March 23, 2021

The stuck ship – which is as long as New York’s Empire State Building is tall – has led to a “pileup of at least 100 vessels” awaiting passage through the Egyptian canal, which connects the Mediterranean Sea to the Indian Ocean, Bloomberg reported.

Julianne Cona, who, according to The Guardian, was aboard another ship in the canal when the incident occurred, posted a photo of the grounded Ever Given on Instagram and lamented in a caption that “we might be here for a little bit.”

As of early Wednesday Cairo time, the waterway remained blocked by the huge vessel.

This screenshot from 4:20 a.m. Wednesday, Cairo time, on the ship tracking website Vessel Finder, shows the traffic jam in the Suez Canal. Ever Given remains stuck in the waterway.
This screenshot from 4:20 a.m. Wednesday, Cairo time, on the ship tracking website Vessel Finder, shows the traffic jam in the Suez Canal. Ever Given remains stuck in the waterway.
Vessel Finder

Ships typically travel in convoys along the Suez Canal.

The Ever Given, which is owned by Evergreen, a Taiwanese shipping company, had been traveling in a northbound convoy when it “suffered a black out,” shipping agent GAC said in a report. The term refers to a complete power failure aboard a vessel, which brings it to a standstill.

AIS data playback of the #SuezCanal the moment things went very, very wrong for the #EVERGIVEN...and then rest of global shipping.

By @TankerTrackers pic.twitter.com/0p8icD95IR

— John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) March 24, 2021

Alok Roy, fleet director of BSM Hong Kong, Ever Given’s ship manager, told Bloomberg that no injuries or pollution had been reported from the grounding.

Oil prices were affected by the incident, however. The Suez Canal is a critical trading route for crude oil, petroleum products and liquefied natural gas ― and many of the vessels stuck in the traffic jam are carrying these products.

Close

What's Hot