New Era

Egypt signs non-disclosure deal over blockage compensati­on

- - Nampa/AFP

CAIRO – Egypt has signed a non- disclosure agreement with the Japanese owner of a megaship that blocked the Suez Canal in March as it finalises a compensati­on agreement, the canal authority chief said. Egypt has been seeking

hundreds of millions of dollars in compensati­on from Japanese firm Shoei Kisen Kaisha for lost canal revenues and the costs of salvaging the ship and repairing the damage to the canal. It slashed its initial claim for US$900 million to US$550 million late last month but the final amount has been the subject of tough negotiatio­ns between the two sides.

“What we signed is a nondisclos­ure agreement” regarding the amount of the compensati­on, Suez Canal Authority chief Osama Rabie told Egypt’s DMC television channel late Wednesday. “A final deal is expected to be reached and announced in the middle of next week.” One of the vessel’s insurers, UK Club, said an agreement in principle had alreadybee­nreachedan­dthetwosid­es were now working to finalise a signed agreement as soon as possible.

The 200 000-tonne MV Ever Given got stuck diagonally across the canal during a sandstorm on 23 March, blocking the vital trade artery for six days before salvage teams could dislodge it.

Egypt lost between US$12 million and US$15 million in revenues for each day the waterway was closed, according to the canal authority.

The grounding of the ship and the intensive salvage efforts needed to refloat it also resulted in significan­t damage to the canal, which Egypt wants to be compensate­d for.

Last month, President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi approved a major expansion of the canal to avoid future blockages.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Totally grounded... An aerial view of the MV Ever Given stuck across the Suez Canal during on 23 March this year. Egypt wants at least US$550 million in compensati­on.
Photo: Contribute­d Totally grounded... An aerial view of the MV Ever Given stuck across the Suez Canal during on 23 March this year. Egypt wants at least US$550 million in compensati­on.

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