Egypt demands over $1B in damages after Suez Canal blockage

Authored by trtworld.com and submitted by Aggressive_Ad5115

Egypt's Suez canal Authority warns the ship and its cargo will not be allowed leave if the issue of damages goes to court.

A man waves an Egyptian flag as ship Ever Given, one of the world's largest container ships, is seen after it was fully floated in Suez Canal, Egypt March 29, 2021. (Reuters)

Egypt wants over $1 billion in compensation after a cargo ship blocked the Suez Canal for nearly a week, a top canal official has said.

Lt. Gen. Osama Rabei, head of the Suez Canal Authority on Thursday warned the ship and its cargo will not be allowed leave Egypt if the issue of damages goes to court.

He said in a phone interview with a pro-government TV talk show that the amount takes into account the salvage operation, costs of stalled traffic, and lost transit fees for the week that the Ever Given had blocked the Suez Canal.

“It’s the country’s right,” Rabei said, without specifying who would be responsible for paying the compensation. He added that in the past, canal authorities and the ship's owners have had a good relationship.

The massive cargo ship is currently in one of the canal's holding lakes, where authorities and the ship's managers say an investigation is ongoing.

On Thursday, the ship's technical managers, Bernard Schulte Ship management, said that the ship's crew was cooperating with authorities in their investigation into what led to the vessel running aground.

They said that Suez Canal Authority investigators have been given access to the Voyage Data Recorder, also known as a vessel's black box.

If the issue of compensation involved litigation, then the Ever Given and its some $3.5 billion worth of cargo would not be allowed to leave Egypt, he told the show’s host.

READ MORE: Suez traffic redirected to old channel as skyscraper-sized ship stranded

Litigation could be complex, since the vessel is owned by a Japanese firm, operated by a Taiwanese shipper, and flagged in Panama.

Bernhard Schulte has said previously that two Egyptian canal pilots were aboard when the ship got stuck. Such an arrangement is customary to guide vessels through the narrow waterway, but the ship’s captain retains ultimate authority, according to experts.

On Monday, a flotilla of tugboats helped by the tides, wrenched the Ever Given's bulbous bow from the canal’s sandy bank, where it had been firmly lodged. The tugs then guided the Ever Given through the water after days of unsuccessful attempts to dislodge the colossus that had captivated the world, drawing scrutiny and social media ridicule.

The Ever Given had crashed into a bank of a single-lane stretch of the canal about 6 kilometres north of the southern entrance, near the city of Suez. That forced some ships to take the long, alternate route around the Cape of Good Hope at Africa’s southern tip, a 5,000-kilometre detour that costs ships hundreds of thousands of dollars in fuel and other costs. Others waited in place for the blockage to be over.

The unprecedented shutdown, which raised fears of extended delays, goods shortages and rising costs for consumers, added to strain on the shipping industry, already under pressure from the coronavirus pandemic.

READ MORE: What the closure of the Suez Canal costs global trade

The stock price of Evergreen corporation that owns the ship that blocked the #SuezCanal for more than 6 days has reached an all-time high. This proves the statement: "No publicity is bad publicity!" pic.twitter.com/PTsP6jcUHG — Ahmed Atef Belal (@a_a_belal) April 2, 2021

Egypt's Suez Canal must move quickly to upgrade its technical infrastructure if it is to avoid future shipping disruption, shipping industry sources said, as the major trade route tries to bounce back from a costly six-day closure.

Egypt will get two new tugboats, one next week and one in August, Rabie said after the ship was finally freed, as well as taking the biggest dredger in the Middle East and arranging for a further five new Chinese tugboats.

But shipping industry sources said specialist equipment and associated procedures have long struggled to keep up with the ever increasing size of commercial vessels.

"The average size of most vessels has increased exponentially over the last 15 years. The ability to salvage these bigger ships has not," said Peter Townsend, a marine insurance industry veteran.

"The issue is getting containers off essentially a 20-storey high building at sea."

Michael Kingston, an international shipping specialist and an adviser to the United Nation's International Maritime Organization, flagged such problems in 2013, three years before the MSC Fabiola container ship ran aground, also blocking traffic for days.

"The obvious way to lighten a vessel ...

is to take the containers off. They had no way of doing it. No equipment was readily available," he said of the Ever Given incident.

READ MORE: Egypt orders lightening stranded ship's cargo in Suez Canal

komvidere on April 4th, 2021 at 07:17 UTC »

The reason the amount is so large, is because the Suez Canal Authority (SCA) is claiming salvage rights, for getting the ship free again. Salvage is a percentage rate of the total value of vessel, cargo and bunkers onboard, which in this case is several billions. The percentage rate is usually set by how difficult and dangerous the salvage operation was.

Usually the vessel owner would however agree on a fixed fee with the tug operator(s) before letting them connect when time permits, to avoid the operator claiming salvage later. Wouldn’t surprise me though, if the SCA refused to do that and just bullied the Owners to let operations proceed.

The 1 billion figure is likely just negotiation starting point. The Owners insurance will negotiate this and suggest to put up a guarantee for final agreed figure, letting the vessel sail in the meantime.

Tasty-Energy-376 on April 4th, 2021 at 04:03 UTC »

“It’s the country’s right,” Rabei said, without specifying who would be responsible for paying the compensation. Who is it? Anyway, this is more of a political statement - someone fucked up and they need to pay.

MuffinRapist on April 4th, 2021 at 01:18 UTC »

What I found interesting is that this issue has been a known concern for a long time and has happened before. But it looks like they haven't addressed the need to deal with the stupidly sized ships that go through there. When you have a billion dollars a week in damages one would think you would have better Disaster recovery and Incident Response systems in place than "Go round" for days on end...