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		Suez Canal steps up efforts to free stuck vessel, U.S. watches energy 
		market impact
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		 [March 27, 2021]  By 
		Nadine Awadalla, Jessica Jaganathan, Roslan Khasawneh and Julia Payne 
 CAIRO (Reuters) - The Suez Canal stepped up 
		efforts on Friday to free a stuck mega vessel, after an earlier attempt 
		failed to end a blockage that has lifted shipping rates for fuel tankers 
		and scrambled global supply chains for everything from grains to baby 
		clothes.
 
 U.S. President Joe Biden said his administration was looking at what it 
		could do to help, after the 400-metre (430-yard) long Ever Given ran 
		aground in the vital trade waterway on Tuesday due to strong wind.
 
 "We have equipment and capacity that most countries don’t have. And we 
		are seeing what help we can be," Biden told reporters in Delaware.
 
 A U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the Navy 
		was prepared to send a team of dredging experts to the canal, but was 
		awaiting approval from local authorities.
 
 Shipping rates for oil product tankers nearly doubled after the ship 
		became stranded, and efforts to free the giant vessel may take weeks and 
		be complicated by unstable weather, threatening costly delays for 
		companies already dealing with COVID-19 restrictions.
 
		 
		
 All its 25 crew members, who have remained on board, were safe, in good 
		health and spirits, Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement (BSM), the Ever 
		Given's technical manager said.
 
 The Dutch rescue team had confirmed two additional tugs would arrive on 
		March 28 to help dislodge the ship after an attempt to re-float it on 
		Friday failed, BSM said.
 
 "There have been no reports of pollution or cargo damage and initial 
		investigations rule out any mechanical or engine failure as a cause of 
		the grounding," a BSM statement said.
 
 The Suez Canal Authority (SCA) said efforts to free the ship by tug had 
		resumed following the completion of dredging operations at its bow to 
		remove 20,000 cubic metres of sand.
 
 "The tugging operations require the availability of a number of 
		supporting factors including wind direction and tides, which makes it a 
		complex technical process," the authority said.
 
 The SCA welcomed a U.S. offer to help. Turkey also said it can send a 
		vessel to the canal, amid a push by Ankara to repair ties with Egypt 
		after years of animosity.
 
 The suspension of traffic along the channel linking Europe and Asia has 
		deepened problems for shipping lines already facing coronavirus-related 
		disruption in supplying retail goods to consumers.
 
 The blockage could cost global trade $6 billion to $10 billion a week, a 
		study by German insurer Allianz showed on Friday.
 
 Ratings agency Moody's expects Europe's manufacturing and car parts 
		suppliers to be most affected because they operate "just-in-time" supply 
		chains, and said port congestion and further delays to the supply chain 
		were "inevitable."
 
		
		 
		
 IMPACT ON OIL
 
 Retired British Royal Navy commander Tom Sharpe said the best bet for 
		the next attempt would be a high tide on Sunday, but because the ship 
		was aground both front and rear there was a risk the hull could rupture 
		if rescuers pulled too hard.
 
 Mohab Mamish, the Egyptian presidential adviser on Suez Canal projects 
		and sea ports, told MBC Misr TV a floating crane should be use to 
		transfer some of the Ever Given's containers to another ship to lighten 
		the vessel and enable it to float.
 
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			Stranded container ship Ever Given, one of the world's largest 
			container ships, is seen after it ran aground, in Suez Canal, Egypt 
			March 26, 2021. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany 
            
			 
About two dozen ships could be seen from the shores of Port Said on Friday 
morning, according to a Reuters witness.
 Oil rose over 3% on Friday as more than 30 oil tankers have been waiting on 
either side of the canal since Tuesday, shipping data on Refinitiv showed. 
However, there is low seasonal demand for crude and liquefied natural gas, which 
will likely mitigate the impact on prices, analysts said.
 
Data intelligence firm Kpler said 10 crude oil tankers were awaiting entry to 
the canal. About 4 million barrels of mostly Kazakh CPC Blend and some Russian 
Urals were waiting along with tankers carrying Libyan, Azeri and some North Sea 
crude oil for Asian refiners, traders said.
 Egypt's SUMED pipeline operator approached crude traders to see whether they 
wanted to book space in the system but so far traders prefer to wait to avoid 
high additional costs. (Graphic: Black Sea to Mediterranean fuel shipping rates 
jump as traders try to bypass blocked Suez canal.
 
 Analysts expect a greater price impact on smaller tankers carrying oil products, 
like naphtha and fuel oil, for export from Europe to Asia, if the canal remains 
shut for weeks.
 
 Re-routing ships around the Cape of Good Hope could add about two weeks and 
extra fuel costs to the voyage, said Sri Paravaikkarasu, director for Asia oil 
at FGE.
 
 The blockage is weighing on the already weak Asian gasoil, or diesel, market. 
More than 60% of Asian exports to the west flowed via the choked Canal in 2020, 
according to FGE. (Graphic: Tanker congestion at Suez Canal.png)
 
 Aframax and Suezmax rates in the Mediterranean have also reacted first as the 
market starts to price in fewer vessels being available in the region," 
shipbroker Braemar ACM Shipbroking said.
 
 
 
At least four Long-Range 2 tankers that might have been headed towards Suez from 
the Atlantic basin are now likely to be evaluating a passage around the Cape of 
Good Hope, Braemar ACM said. Each LR-2 tanker can carry around 75,000 tonnes of 
oil.
 
 The cost of shipping clean products, such as gasoline and diesel, from the 
Russian port of Tuapse on the Black Sea to southern France jumped 73% over the 
last three days to $2.58 a barrel on March 25, according to Refinitiv Eikon 
data. (Graphic: Giant containership Ever Given continues to block traffic in the 
Suez Canal.
 
 The shipping index benchmark for LR2 vessels from the Middle East to Japan, 
known as TC1, has climbed by a third since last week to 137.5 worldscale points, 
said Anoop Jayaraj, clean tanker broker at Fearnleys Singapore. Worldscale is an 
industry tool used to calculate freight rates.
 
 On the crude side, traders have had to pay 10-20% more for replacement tankers 
but market freight rates have not yet risen as charterers are not ready to 
commit to higher levels in case the container is freed this weekend, shipbrokers 
said.
 
 (Reporting by Florence Tan, Jessica Jaganathan, Gavin Maguire, Roslan Khasawneh, 
Koustav Samanta in Singapore and Nadine Awadalla in Cairo; Additional reporting 
by Gleb Gorodyankin, Olga Yagova in Moscow and Julia Payne in London, Jarrett 
Renshaw in New Castle, Delaware; Writing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise, William 
Maclean; Editing by Christopher Cushing, Frances Kerry and Timothy Heritage)
 
				 
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