The Mercury News

Business: Probe begins in Suez Canal fiasco.

Companies brace for years of litigation

- By Samy Magdy and Jon Gambrell

SUEZ, EGYPT >> Experts boarded the massive container ship Tuesday that had blocked Egypt’s vital Suez Canal and disrupted global trade for nearly a week, seeking answers to a single question that could have billions of dollars in legal repercussi­ons: What went wrong?

As convoys of ships again began traveling through the artery linking the Mediterran­ean and Red Seas, a canal service provider said more than 300 vessels carrying everything from crude oil to cattle were still waiting for their turn in a process that will take days. Egyptian government officials, insurers, shippers and others similarly waited for more details about what caused the skyscraper-sized Ever Given to become wedged across the canal on March 23.

When blame gets assigned, it will likely lead to years of litigation to recoup the costs of repairing the ship,

fixing the canal and reimbursin­g those who saw their cargo shipments disrupted. Since the vessel is owned by a Japanese firm, operated by a Taiwanese shipper, flagged in Panama and now stuck in Egypt, matters quickly become an internatio­nal morass.

“This ship is a multinatio­nal conglomera­tion,” said Capt. John Konrad, the founder and CEO of the shipping news website gcaptain.com.

Experts boarded the Ever Given as it idled Tuesday in Egypt’s Great Bitter Lake, just north of the site where it previously blocked the canal. A senior canal pilot, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to journalist­s, told The Associated Press that experts were looking for signs of damage and trying to determine why the vessel ran aground. There could be significan­t damage to the the ship, Konrad warned. Stuck for days across the canal, the ship’s middle rose and fell with the tide, bending up and down under the tremendous weight of some 20,000 containers across its 400-meter (quarter-mile) length. On Monday, when workers partially floated the ship, all that pressure came forward to its bow.

“Structural integrity is No. 1. You know, there was a lot of strain on that ship as it was sagging in the waterway,” Konrad said. “They have to check everything for cracks and particular­ly that rudder and the propeller in the back that’s connected to the engine room.”

“And then they have to go through all the mechanical equipment, make sure they test the engines, all the safety valves, all the equipment, and then determine that it’s safe to sail either by itself or with a tug escort to the next port,” he added.

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 ?? AYMAN AREF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cargo ship moves through Ismailia, Egypt, on Tuesday as traffic resumed through the Suez Canal after it was blocked by a stranded ship.
AYMAN AREF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cargo ship moves through Ismailia, Egypt, on Tuesday as traffic resumed through the Suez Canal after it was blocked by a stranded ship.

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