The Capital

Maersk sues shipping line over Suez block

- By Samy Magdy

CAIRO — The world’s biggest shipping company said Monday it sued a rival shipping line in a Danish court, seeking compensati­on for ship delays that resulted from the blocking of the Suez Canal by a hulking vessel two years ago.

The Panama-flagged vessel Ever Given, operated by Evergreen Marine Corp., ran aground in March 2021, blocking the global waterway for nearly a week. The enormous vessel was released in a massive salvage operation.

In an email to The Associated Press, shipping giant A.P. Moeller-Maersk said it filed a claim against Evergreen Marine, the vessel’s Japanese owner and its German technical manager, Bernhard Schulte Management, in the Danish Maritime and Commercial High Court in Copenhagen, Denmark.

The Copenhagen-based shipping company said the claim is related to losses suffered during the canal’s blockage. It did not provide further details, including when it filed the claim.

The ShippingWa­tch, a news outlet covering maritime industry, however, reported Monday that 50 of Maersk’s container ships were delayed because of the canal’s blockage.

Maersk seeks millions of dollars in compensati­on to cover, among other things, costs it incurred from customers with goods being transporte­d on the delayed ships, the report added.

Evergreen Marine and Bernhard Schulte did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. The ship’s Japanese owner, Shoei Kisen Kaisha Ltd., was not immediatel­y reachable.

The Ever Given was on its way to the Dutch port of Rotterdam on March 23, 2021, when it slammed into the bank of a single-lane stretch of the canal about 3.7 miles north of the southern entrance, near the Egyptian city of Suez.

A massive salvage effort by a flotilla of tugboats helped by the tides freed the skyscraper-sized vessel six days later, ending the crisis and allowing hundreds of waiting ships to pass through the canal.

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