<p>Egypt's Suez Canal Authority said Saturday that a shipping traffic jam caused by a giant container vessel getting stuck on the crucial waterway for almost a week has been cleared.</p>.<p>Traffic on the canal, a conduit for over 10 percent of world trade, had begun moving again on Monday evening after the 200,000-tonne MV Ever Given was refloated with the help of international salvage experts.</p>.<p>"All the ships waiting in the waterway since the grounding of the... (MV) Ever Given have completed passage," SCA chief Osama Rabie said in a statement by the canal authority.</p>.<p>The wedging of the Japanese-owned, Taiwanese-operated ship had created tailbacks to the north and south totalling over 420 ships, with billions of dollars-worth of cargo.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/suez-canal-a-vital-oil-transit-route-with-an-ancient-history-966945.html" target="_blank">Suez Canal: A vital oil transit route with an ancient history</a></strong></p>.<p>Rabie has acknowledged that the blockage, which began when the ship veered off course in a sandstorm, left Egypt's international shipping and wider reputation on the line.</p>.<p>Egyptian authorities have presented the freeing of the mega-ship as a vindication of the country's engineering and salvage capabilities.</p>.<p>"Ninety-nine percent" of personnel who worked to refloat the giant vessel were Egyptian, according to Rabie.</p>.<p>Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has pledged investment to ensure no repeat of the episode, and the SCA has called for new tugboats and dredgers are needed.</p>.<p>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.</p>.<p>The canal is economically vital to Egypt, which lost between $12 and $15 million in revenues for each day the waterway was closed, according to the canal authority.</p>.<p>Nearly 19,000 ships navigated the canal in 2020, working out an average of just over 50 per day, it says.</p>.<p>But the president and port authority have ruled out any further widening of the southern stretch of the canal where the boat became diagonally stuck.</p>.<p>Sisi oversaw an expansion of a northern section, which included widening an existing stretch and introducing a 35 kilometre parallel waterway, to much fanfare in 2014-15.</p>.<p>But that was achieved at a cost of over $8 billion, without significantly increasing revenues from the canal.</p>.<p>The Suez Canal earned Egypt just over $5.7 billion in 2019/20, little changed from the year before, and similar to the $5.3 billion in revenues earned back in 2014.</p>.<p>"Economically... (further expansion) would not be useful," Sisi declared this week.</p>.<p>The costly blockage is likely to result in litigation, according to analysts, with the ship's Japanese owners, Taiwanese operators and Egypt itself all under the microscope.</p>
<p>Egypt's Suez Canal Authority said Saturday that a shipping traffic jam caused by a giant container vessel getting stuck on the crucial waterway for almost a week has been cleared.</p>.<p>Traffic on the canal, a conduit for over 10 percent of world trade, had begun moving again on Monday evening after the 200,000-tonne MV Ever Given was refloated with the help of international salvage experts.</p>.<p>"All the ships waiting in the waterway since the grounding of the... (MV) Ever Given have completed passage," SCA chief Osama Rabie said in a statement by the canal authority.</p>.<p>The wedging of the Japanese-owned, Taiwanese-operated ship had created tailbacks to the north and south totalling over 420 ships, with billions of dollars-worth of cargo.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/suez-canal-a-vital-oil-transit-route-with-an-ancient-history-966945.html" target="_blank">Suez Canal: A vital oil transit route with an ancient history</a></strong></p>.<p>Rabie has acknowledged that the blockage, which began when the ship veered off course in a sandstorm, left Egypt's international shipping and wider reputation on the line.</p>.<p>Egyptian authorities have presented the freeing of the mega-ship as a vindication of the country's engineering and salvage capabilities.</p>.<p>"Ninety-nine percent" of personnel who worked to refloat the giant vessel were Egyptian, according to Rabie.</p>.<p>Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has pledged investment to ensure no repeat of the episode, and the SCA has called for new tugboats and dredgers are needed.</p>.<p>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.</p>.<p>The canal is economically vital to Egypt, which lost between $12 and $15 million in revenues for each day the waterway was closed, according to the canal authority.</p>.<p>Nearly 19,000 ships navigated the canal in 2020, working out an average of just over 50 per day, it says.</p>.<p>But the president and port authority have ruled out any further widening of the southern stretch of the canal where the boat became diagonally stuck.</p>.<p>Sisi oversaw an expansion of a northern section, which included widening an existing stretch and introducing a 35 kilometre parallel waterway, to much fanfare in 2014-15.</p>.<p>But that was achieved at a cost of over $8 billion, without significantly increasing revenues from the canal.</p>.<p>The Suez Canal earned Egypt just over $5.7 billion in 2019/20, little changed from the year before, and similar to the $5.3 billion in revenues earned back in 2014.</p>.<p>"Economically... (further expansion) would not be useful," Sisi declared this week.</p>.<p>The costly blockage is likely to result in litigation, according to analysts, with the ship's Japanese owners, Taiwanese operators and Egypt itself all under the microscope.</p>