More than 320 ships are idling in a traffic jam as the Ever Given container ship continues to block the Suez Canal after running aground on Tuesday, the head of the waterway authority, Osama Rabie, said Saturday.
"At the moment, 321 ships are waiting for their turn to pass through the Suez Canal due to the situation," Rabie told a press conference.
He added that fourteen tugs are involved in the operation to free the stranded ship. The situation, he noted, is complicated by the size of the ship and the number of containers aboard. The rudder and the propeller of the vessel have started working again, Rabie added.
This comes after earlier on Saturday, the operation to refloat the Ever Given container vessel stranded in the Suez Canal resumed. If the new attempt, which is counting on high tide, fails another effort will be made on Sunday morning, Reuters reported, citing three sources familiar with canal operations.
Earlier in the day, the Jerusalem Post reported that the tanker budged for the first time on Friday night since getting stuck, after 20,000 tonnes of sand were dug out from underneath it.
About 10 percent of the world's trade flows through the Suez Canal. According to Lloyd's List, more than $9 billion worth of goods are held up for every day the passage is blocked – that's about $400 million an hour.