The Highest Daily Transit Rate Recorded At The Suez Canal

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  • Suez Canal records the highest daily transit rate in its history
  • eighty-seven ships passed through the waterway on Wednesday
  • widening and deepening the canal would be the priority in the first phase of the new project
  • two bypasses exist along the canal that allows ships to move in both directions simultaneously, one of which was completed in 2015
  • the authority has also purchased its own high-tech rescue equipment in recent months, including two powerful dredgers

The Suez Canal recorded the highest daily transit rate in its history on Wednesday, with 87 ships traversing in both directions. Eighty-seven ships passed through the waterway on Wednesday, with an ambitious expansion project set to increase capacity says an article on National News.

Absorb higher capacity

Admiral Osama Rabie, the Suez Canal Authority’s chairman, said it showed that the waterway was ready to absorb higher capacity amid an ambitious expansion project. This expansion was accelerated after the Ever Given container ship ran aground in March, stopping traffic for six days and disrupting global trade.

87 vessels traversed

The $10-billion project is expected to triple annual revenue and double the number of vessels passing through the vital waterway by 2023. Nearly 19,000 ships traversed the waterway last year, an average of 51.5 ships a day. On Wednesday, the 87 vessels had a total cargo-carrying capacity of 4.8 million tonnes. Thirty-eight traversed the canal from the north and 49 from the south.

Traffic at the canal

Northbound traffic was led by the giant container ship MSC Istanbul with a net tonnage of 182,000, which was on its journey from Morocco to Singapore. The Liberian-flagged container ship MSC Anna, traveling from Saudi Arabia to Egypt with a net tonnage of 203,000, led the southbound convoy. The traffic included 18 container ships, 18 large oil tankers, and 10 liquefied natural gas and liquefied petroleum gas tankers.

Priority of the new project

Admiral Rabie said widening and deepening the canal would be the priority in the first phase of the new project. Dredging work to turn 10 kilometers of a 40-km, single-lane stretch of the canal into a double lane area began in May.

Millions in lost revenue

Currently, two bypasses exist along the canal that allows ships to move in both directions simultaneously, one of which was completed in 2015. The authority has also purchased its own high-tech rescue equipment in recent months, including two powerful dredgers, to avoid a repeat of the Ever Given incident that cost the canal millions of dollars in lost revenue.

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Source: National News