Suez Canal blockage - Lessons

A giant container ship blocking the Suez Canal has put the vulnerabilities of the global trade center stage. DW looks at the major shipping routes most at risk from unforeseen events. The Ever-giving, a 400-meter (1,300-foot) container ship got stranded in Egypt’s Suez Canal on 23 March 2021 and has since been blocking the vital maritime passageway between Asia and Europe. The suspension of traffic through the narrow channel has deepened problems for world trade already disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic. Dozens of ships — including several oil tankers — are now waiting either side of the canal, according to Refinitiv shipping data, while several others have been rerouted. That is likely to add up to 15 days to their journey. On 26 March 2021, the Reuters news agency reported that efforts to free the ship had failed and may now take several more weeks. Unstable weather conditions may further complicate the dredging of sand from around the vessel. The blockage could cost global trade $6-10 billion (€5-8.5 billion) a week, a study by German insurer Allianz suggested. The cost of shipping oil products, for example, has already doubled and delays to the global manufacturing supply chain, especially the auto industry, could hit consumers. However, Suez is not the most vulnerable bottleneck for world trade. DW looks at the four choke points that a strong post-COVID economic recovery relies on. History 
  • In 1858, the Universal Suez Ship Canal Company was tasked to construct and operate the canal for 99 years, after which rights would be handed to the Egyptian government.
  • Despite facing multiple problems ranging from financial difficulties and attempts by the British and Turks to halt construction, the canal was opened for international navigation in 1869.
  • The French and British held most of the shares in the canal company. The British used their position to sustain their maritime and colonial interests by maintaining a defensive force along the Suez Canal Zone as part of a 1936 treaty.
  • In 1954, facing pressure from Egyptian nationalists, the two countries signed a seven-year treaty that led to the withdrawal of British troops.
Importance of Suez Canal 
  • The canal is in Egypt, connecting Port Said on the Mediterranean Sea to the Indian Ocean via the Egyptian city of Suez on the Red Sea. Therefore, The Suez Canal is an artificial sea-level waterway running north to south across the Isthmus of Suez in Egypt, to connect the Mediterranean Sea and the Red Sea.
  • The passage enables more direct shipping between Europe and Asia, eliminating the need to circumnavigate Africa and cutting voyage times by days or weeks.
  • The 193-km waterway Suez Canal which connects Asia and Europe is so important to world trade that world powers have fought over it since it was completed in 1869.
  • About 12% of world trade passes through the canal each year, everything from crude oil to grains to instant coffee.
  • Without Suez, a super tanker carrying Mideast crude oil to Europe would have to travel an extra 6,000 milesaround Africa’s Cape of Good Hope, adding some $300,000 in fuel costs. Because it has no locks, it can even handle aircraft carriers.
  • The canal’s location makes it a key link for shipping crude oil and other hydrocarbons from countries such as Saudi Arabia to Europe and North America.
  • Among other goods, 54.1 million tons of cereal passed through the canal, 53.5 million tons of ores and metals, and 35.4 million tons of coal and coke in 2019.
Freeing the big ship
  • The crisis was now not just the talk of Egypt’s 100 million residents, but much of the world.
  • And pressure was mounting, with the maritime traffic jam holding up at least $9 billion in trade a day and forcing a growing backlog of vessels carrying oil, consumer goods and livestock.
  • And by the end of the week the rescue effort had become an international affair. It was a huge team effort with canal officials coordinating the whole thing.
  • For all the human toil and modern equipment, the rescue efforts ultimately relied upon a power beyond their control: the tides.
  • When it comes right down to it, we’re still relying on the same seamanship. It was the moon and a moon-tide that helped float the vessel.
Controls of the canal now
  • The British powers that controlled the canal through the first two world wars withdrew forces there in 1956 after years of negotiations with Egypt, effectively relinquishing authority to the Egyptian government led by President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
  • The canal is a major source of income for Egypt’s economy, with the African country earning USD 5.61 billion in revenues from it last year.
  • In 2015, Egypt announced plans to further expand the Suez Canal, aiming to reduce waiting times and double the number of ships that can use the canal daily by 2023.
Strait of Hormuz
  • The sea passage between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman that leads to the Indian Ocean is the most critical choke point for oil and gas.
  • Some 167 kilometers (90 miles) long, about a quarter of seaborne-traded oil and a third of the world’s liquefied natural gas passes through the strait.
  • The route is particularly vulnerable due to Middle East geopolitics. The strait connects many different powers and oil market players, including Saudi ArabiaIran, the United Arab EmiratesKuwait and Iraq.
  • The actual width of the fairway for the huge tankers is roughly 3 kilometers in both directions, meaning the waterway could be easily controllable during a conflict. During the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, the two sides sought to disrupt each other’s oil exports plying the strait.
  • Iran has repeatedly threatened to disrupt oil shipments through the strait in retaliation for US sanctions aimed at its energy exports. At one point, Tehran threatened to mine the waterway.
  • In May 2019four vessels — including two Saudi oil tankers — were attacked off the UAE coast near Fujairah, just outside the strait. In January this year, Iran seized a South Korean-flagged tanker in Gulf waters and detained its crew.
Strait of Malacca
  • The 900-km long straight is Asia’s primary chokepoint and one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. The waterway links Asia with the Middle East and Europe, carrying about 40% of global trade. More than 100,000 vessels ply the waterway every year.
  • At its narrowest point off Singapore, the strait is only 2.7 kilometers wide, creating a natural bottleneck, as well as potential for collisions, grounding or oil spills.
  • Some 16 million barrels per day of oil flowed through the waterway in 2016, making it the world’s second most important energy passageway. The strait has become increasingly important strategically to Beijing, with nearly 80% of China’s crude oil imports passing through, from the Middle East and Africa. Suez Canal
  • This artificial waterway connects the Mediterranean to the Red Sea and prevents ships from having to pass through the Cape of Good Hope, off South Africa. The canal knocks about 8,900 kilometers off a ship’s journey time.
  • The Egyptian government expanded the canal in 2014, almost doubling the number of ships that can use the waterway per day from 49 to 97. Despite this, some supertankers can still not ply the canal, and some have to offload part of their cargo onto smaller vessels and reload at the other end. Suez saw about 12% of world trade volume pass through last year. The Suez Canal Authority reported that a record of 18,880 ships traversed the passageway in 2020, carrying more than 1 billion tons of cargo. At least two other ships have got stuck in the canal since 2008 — one forced a three-day closure.
  • The canal is also seen as highly vulnerable to political unrest in the Middle East. However, the Arab Spring and subsequent fall of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in 2011 had little impact on traffic.
  • In 2013, Cairo said it had foiled an attack on a container ship which was aimed at disrupting shipping in the busy Suez Canal.
Panama Canal
  • The 80-kilometer Panama canal spans the narrowest part of Panama and connects the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.One of world’s busiest shipping routes, it has historically handled about 5% of world trade and nearly 14,000 transits were made last year.
  • In 2016, Panama opened the long-delayed $5.4 billion expansion, which triples the size of ships that can travel the canal. In theory98% of the world’s shipping can now ply the route, avoiding the lengthy and hazardous Cape Horn route around the southern tip of South America.
  • Although the canal isn’t subject to the same geopolitical risks as other chokepoints, the coronavirus pandemic and adverse weather have created bottlenecks in recent months, delaying the transport of container ships and supplies of gas from the US Gulf Coast.
 


POSTED ON 14-04-2021 BY ADMIN
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