Shipping volume in the Suez
Canal dropped 28 percent year on year in the last 10 days ending Jan. 2,
official data has revealed according to international media reports.
Latest figures released by the International Monetary Fund’s Port Watch
platform show that disruptions in the Red Sea have increased in recent weeks,
putting vital trade flows at risk.
On the other hand, the data further disclosed that the shipping volume in the
Cape of Good Hope has surged 67 percent during the same period.
This is mainly attributed to
the fact that last month’s attacks on ships in the Red Sea have caused
disruptions in the maritime trade as leading global freight firms rerouted
around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid the Suez Canal.
In mid-December, major
freight companies — including MSC and Denmark’s Maersk— initiated this
rerouting strategy around Africa, incurring additional costs and delays, as
anticipated by industry analysts.
In a statement, Chairman
Osama Rabea said the authority is “closely following the consequences of
current tensions in the Red Sea on the traffic in the canal.â€
However, toward the end of
the December 2023, there were indications of a return to the Suez Canal route,
with Maersk announcing the scheduling of several dozen container vessels for
travel via the waterway and the Red Sea in the upcoming weeks
Maersk also disclosed
preparations for a return to the Red Sea for both eastbound and westbound
journeys. Concurrently, France’s CMA CGM announced an increase in the number of
vessels traveling through the Suez Canal.
About 15 percent of world
shipping traffic transits the waterway, serving as the shortest shipping route
between Europe and Asia. Additionally, the Suez Canal holds significance as a
crucial source of foreign currency for Egypt.