Tugs were able to move the ship to a repair area - avoiding any repeat
of the infamous Ever Given incident that delayed world trade two years
ago.
A container ship loaded with more than 65,000 tonnes of corn from
Ukraine has been refloated after running aground in the Suez Canal.
The
M/V Glory was 24 miles (38km) into its southward journey through the
Egyptian waterway, near the city of Qantara, when it suffered a
technical fault, according to the Suez Canal Authority (SCA).
The breakdown was expected to only cause minor delays and regular
passage through the canal was expected to resume at 11am local time
after tug boats moved it to a repair area.
The ship left
Chornomorsk port in southwest Ukraine on Christmas Day and was heading
to China with 65,970 metric tonnes of corn, according to the Joint
Coordination Centre, which is overseeing the grain exports.
The centre said the ship had been cleared to continue its journey after an inspection in Istanbul on 3 January.
In March 2021, the Suez Canal - which provides the shortest route
between Europe and Asia - was blocked for six days after another ship,
the Ever Given, got wedged horizontally in high winds.
The blockage backed up ships and temporarily stalled global trade in a variety of goods.
The Ever Given was held by the SCA for more than 100 days as it
sought hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation from its Japanese
owners.
Egyptian authorities began widening and deepening the southern part of the canal after the incident to try to prevent a repeat.
In August last year, an oil tanker also ran aground in a single-lane stretch of the canal, blocking it for five hours.
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