Suez canal blockage: Snarl halts $9.6 billion a day worth of ship traffic
A
back-of-the-envelope calculation shows there’s about $9.6 billion worth of
daily marine traffic halted by the massive container vessel that lodged in the
Suez Canal earlier this week, blocking transit in both directions.
The
figure is based off an assessment by Lloyd’s List that suggests westbound
traffic is worth around $5.1 billion a day and eastbound traffic approximately
$4.5 billion. The venerable journal concedes that these are “rough
calculations,” however. There are about 185 vessels waiting to transit the
waterway, data compiled by Bloomberg show, while Lloyd’s estimated 165.
So
far efforts by tugs and diggers to dislodge the Ever Given -- the 400-meter
long vessel that became wedged in the canal on Tuesday -- have failed and work
to re-float the ship has been suspended until Thursday morning in Egypt,
shipping agent Inchcape said, citing the Suez Canal Authority.
The
queue on Wednesday included 40 bulk carriers hauling commodities ranging from
crops to dry goods like cement as well as vessels carrying oil, fuel and
chemicals, Bloomberg data show. There were also eight ships carrying livestock,
more than 30 general cargo vessels and a water tanker.
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