With hopes rising that the partial refloating of the Ever
Given means the Suez Canal will soon reopen for business, shipping analysts
cautioned that it will take time — perhaps days — for the hundreds of ships now
waiting for passage to continue their journeys.
اضافة اعلان
Shipping analysts estimated the colossal traffic jam was
holding up nearly $10 billion in trade every day.
“All global retail trade moves in containers, or 90 percent
of it,” said Alan Murphy, the founder of Sea-Intelligence, a maritime data and
analysis firm. “Name any brand name, and they will be stuck on one of those
vessels.”
The Syrian government said over the weekend that it will
begin rationing the use of fuel after the closure of the Suez Canal delayed the
delivery of a critical shipment of oil to the war-torn nation.
And in Lebanon, which in recent months has suffered blackouts
amid an economic and political crisis, local media were reporting that the
country’s shaky fuel supply risks further disruption if the blockage continues.
With the backlog of ships now stuck outside the canal
growing to more than 300 on Sunday, the threat to the oil supplies in those two
countries was an early indication of how quickly the disruption to the smooth
functioning of global trade could ripple outward and cause real world pain.
Virtually every container ship making the journey from
factories in Asia to consumer markets in Europe passes through the channel. So
do tankers laden with oil and natural gas.
The shutdown of the canal is affecting as much as 15 percent
of the world’s container shipping capacity, according to Moody’s Investor
Service, leading to delays at ports around the globe. Tankers carrying 9.8
million barrels of crude, about a tenth of a day’s global consumption, are now
waiting to enter the canal, estimates Kpler, a firm that tracks petroleum
shipping.
The Syrian Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources said
the blockage of the canal had “hindered the oil supplies to Syria and delayed
arrival of a tanker carrying oil and oil derivations to Syria.”
Rationing was needed, the ministry said in a statement, “in
order to guarantee the continued supply of basic services to Syrians such as
bakeries, hospitals, water stations, communication centers, and other vital
institutions.”