Ever Given

container ship of Evergreen Marine Corporation, launched in 2018 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ever Given
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Ever Given is one of the largest container ships in the world. The ship can carry 20.124 TEU's.[clarification needed]

Quick facts History, Panama ...

Ever Given is owned by Imabari Shipbuilding, which has a branch that leases ships. It is operated by Evergreen Marine, a container transportation and shipping company.

The ship is registered in Panama. A German ship management company called Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement (BSM) does Ever Given's technical management.[6]

On 23 March 2021, while traveling from Tanjung Pelepas, Malaysia[7] to Rotterdam, Netherlands, the ship became stuck in the Suez Canal and blocked it.

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Description

Ever Given is one of 13 container ships built to the Imabari 20000 design developed by Imabari Shipbuilding. With a length of 399.94 metres (1,312 ft 2 in), it is one of the longest ships in service. Its hull has a beam of 58.8 metres (192 ft 11 in), a depth of 32.9 metres (107 ft 11 in), and a fully laden draft of 14.5 metres (47 ft 7 in).

Ever Given has a gross tonnage of 220,940; a net tonnage of 99,155; and a deadweight tonnage of 199,629 tons.

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2019 collision

On 9 February 2019, the ship struck and heavily damaged a 25-meter-long HADAG ferry boat at Blankenese, near the harbour of Hamburg, Germany.[8] Two minutes after the collision, a traffic ban on the Elbe river was issued due to high winds.[9]

2021 Suez Canal grounding

See the main article: 2021 Suez Canal incident

At 07:40 Eastern European Time (UTC+02:00) on 23 March 2021, the Ever Given was passing through the Suez Canal on its way to Rotterdam from Tanjung Pelepas.[7][10] It got stuck near the village of Manshiyet Rugola (at coordinates 30.01761, 32.58018)[11] and blocked the canal.[6] The ship ended up with its bow wedged in one bank of the canal and stern nearly touching the other.[12]

Background

Thumb
Satellite image of Ever Given blocking the Suez Canal

The ship had been running fifth in a northbound convoy, with fifteen vessels behind it when it ran aground. Traffic in both directions was blocked for at least five days, leading to a traffic jam of over two hundred vessels.[1][13] On 24 March, Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement (BSM), the technical manager of the ship, denied earlier reports that it had been partially refloated.[10] Trade experts worried about a supply chain delay, and tension due to the indefinite delay to the trapped ships as well as other vessels that planned to cross the Suez Canal.[14]

Re-floating the ship

Eight tugboats worked to re-float the vessel in collaboration with a Komatsu excavator removing sand from the side of the canal where the bow of the vessel was wedged.[10][15] After an overnight break, the salvage work resumed in the morning of 25 March.[16]

On 25 March, an unnamed Egyptian official said refloating the ship would take days if not weeks, according to reports. Lt. Gen. Ossama Rabei, head of the SCA, announced, "The Suez Canal will not spare any efforts to ensure the restoration of navigation and to serve the movement of global trade."

All 25 crew were safe and accounted for. They remained on board while the ship was stuck, and there were "no reports of injuries or pollution".[17][18] Egyptian meteorologists reported that high winds and a sandstorm had affected the area on the day the ship got stuck, with winds reaching as much as 50 kilometres per hour (31 mph).[19]

Causes

Addressing a press conference on 27 March, Rabie, Chairman of the SCA, said that weather conditions were "not the main reasons" for the ship's grounding. He added that there may have been technical or human errors and that these would be shown in the investigation.[20]

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  • Suezmax

Notes

  1. The name "EVERGREEN" written in large capital letters on the hull refers to the name of the Taiwanese firm that operates the ship, Evergreen Marine.

References

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