High Tide in Suez Canal Raises Hopes of Freeing Cargo Ship

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SUEZ, Egypt—Salvage teams are girding for another attempt to free the Ever Given container ship that has been blocking the Suez Canal for five days, hoping that a higher-than-usual spring tide will help them unstick the 1,300-foot vessel from the east side of the channel, but their rescue efforts could be complicated by damage to the vessel’s bow.

The ship’s manager, Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement, said water had gotten into two forward tanks, but that the ship was stable. “The bow was partly wedged in a rock formation and it made the effort more difficult,” a member of the salvage team said.

People involved in the operation had earlier suggested the Ever Given, operated by Taiwan-based Evergreen Group, might have been freed as early as Saturday. A rescue team had managed to free the ship’s rudder and start its engines after it veered off course during stormy conditions on March 23, blocking the critical trade route to traffic and disrupting global supply chains. Some 320 vessels are waiting to traverse the 120-mile channel, according to the Suez Canal Authority, which runs the waterway.

Dredging operations continued Sunday, and officials say they will try to free the ship with the help of the higher spring tide in the evening without having to unload containers to reduce its weight, which would be a difficult operation because of the location of the Ever Given.

“We hope we don’t reach a scenario of having to start taking containers off the ship, but we are preparing for it in case we have to,” said Osama Rabie, chairman of the canal authority, adding that these were the instructions of President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi.



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