With salvage efforts continuing, ships are caught in a traffic jam

 


In the Red Sea there is a "traffic jam" due to the blockage of Egypt's Suez canal by a giant container ship, according to a seafarer on a nearby ship.


Joe Reynolds, boss architect of the Maersk Ohio, told the BBC the quantity of vessels holding up at the waterway's southern passageway was "developing dramatically". "It will influence delivering plans all throughout the planet," he cautioned. Towing boats and dredgers are attempting to remove the Consistently Given, which is wedged slantingly across the stream. The 400m-long (1,300ft), 200,000-ton vessel steered into the rocks on Tuesday morning in the midst of high breezes and a dust storm that influenced perceivability. Expert rescue organizations have been acquired to help refloat the boat, and a counselor to Egypt's leader has said he trusts the circumstance will be settled inside a few days. Be that as it may, specialists have said it could require weeks if the vessel's compartments should be taken out.



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