Suez canal blocked after massive container ship breaks down
Suez Canal is BLOCKED as enormous 1,312ft, 200,000-ton cargo ship Ever Given runs aground – causing tailbacks snaking HUNDREDS of miles as every tugboat in Egypt is sent to help clear shipping lane
- The 200k-tonne MV Ever Given lost power while going through the Suez Canal
- The 1,312ft long vessel is blocking the entire width of the major shipping lane
- Some 14 vessels travelling behind the Ever Given are also stuck in the canal
One of the world’s largest container ships has blocked the Suez canal causing a massive traffic jam after breaking down while transiting the major shipping lane.
The Taiwan-owned, Panama-registered MV Ever Given reportedly lost power before drifting across the entire width of the canal and becoming jammed, with its bow lodged on the canal’s eastern wall and its stern against the western one.
The vessel, which is 1,312ft long, 175ft wide and weighs almost 200,000 tons, was part of a 20-ship convoy and was around four miles into the 120-mile canal heading north when it lost power.
GAC, a global shipping and logistics company, described the Ever Given as suffering ‘a blackout while transiting in a northerly direction’, without elaborating.

The MV Ever Given, pictured, has blocked the entire width of the Suez Canal causing a massive traffic jam

The Ever Given was part of a 20-ship convoy heading north through the canal, from Suez Gulf into the Mediterranean

Several tugs are assisting the Ever Given, which has been stuck for more than 12 hours

Social media users soon noticed the delays caused by the Ever Green’s mechanical problems
The 15 vessels behind have to wait for the Ever Given to be cleared before they can continue their journey.
Worse still, vessels planning to travel from the north are also halted because of the incident.
The three-year-old vessel is owned by the major shipping company Evergreen.
Data from Marine Traffic shows several tugs attending to the stricken vessel, though they have failed to pull it clear.
The vessel is carrying cargo from Yantain, China to Rotterdam, Netherlands.
It is understood, efforts to refloat the vessel will take place at 7am after the first attempts failed.
Julianne Cona, who is stuck onboard the US-registered Maersk Denver – which is stuck behind the Ever Given – wrote on Instagram: ‘Ship in front of us ran aground while going through the canal and is now stuck sideways looks like we might be here for a little bit.’
Closing the 120-mile waterway for any length of time causes major issues for the distribution of cargo across the globe as the canal is used as a short cut linking Asia with Europe.
The canal was closed for several months after the 1956 Suez crisis and again in 1967 for eight years following the Six- Day war.
In February 2019 the Suez Canal Authority announced 75 massive cargo vessels transited the waterway carrying 5.8 million ton on a single day.
Officials on February 6, were able to guide 40 vessels from the Red Sea into the Mediterranean while 35 ships went south.
On average, approximately 50 cargo vessels a day use the canal.

The Suez Canal is one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world, connecting Europe with the Far East
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