Cairo: A tanker transporting crude oil broke down in a single-lane part of Egypt's Suez Canal on Sunday, disrupting traffic in the global waterway, Egyptian authorities said. The Malta-flagged Seavigour suffered a mechanical malfunction at the 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) mark of the canal, said George Safwat, a spokesperson for Egypt's Suez Canal Authority.
The canal authority deployed three tugboats to tow away the tanker and allow other vessels to transit the waterway, he said. The tanker was part of the north convoy, which transits the canal from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, he said. Adm. Ossama Rabei, head of the Suez Canal Authority, said the tanker broke down in a single-lane part of the waterway, disrupting the transit of eight other vessels that were behind it in the convoy.
In a phone interview with a local television station, he said that tugboats were towing the tanker to a double-lane part at the 17 kilometers (10.5 miles) mark of the canal. The Seavigour was built in 2016, and is 274 metres (899 feet) long and 48.63 metres (159 feet) wide, according to MarineTraffic, a vessel tracking service provider.