City
Epaper

Yemeni rebels repeatedly attack merchant ships, Suez Canal traffic drops by more than 40 pc

By ANI | Updated: January 26, 2024 13:35 IST

Taipei [Taiwan], January 26 (ANI/CNA): The traffic volume of the Suez Canal dropped by more than 40 per cent ...

Open in App

Taipei [Taiwan], January 26 (ANI/CNA): The traffic volume of the Suez Canal dropped by more than 40 per cent as Yemen rebels repeatedly attacked merchant ships.

According to United Nations data, the Yemen rebels' Commercial traffic through the Suez Canal has dropped by more than 40 per cent in the past two months since the Houthi attack, sparking United Nations concerns about global trade.

Jan Hoffman, president of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), told reporters today, "We are very concerned that attacks on shipping in the Red Sea will exacerbate global trade tensions and add to existing trade disruptions caused by geopolitics and climate change. More serious."

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development said that in the past two months, ships were diverted from the Red Sea to South Africa's Cape of Good Hope, resulting in a 42 per cent drop in traffic through the Suez Canal. Egypt's Suez Canal connects the Mediterranean and Red Sea.

Hoffman said that more than 80 per cent of international trade in goods is transported by sea. "Sea transport is indeed the lifeline of global trade."

According to data from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, the number of container ships passing through the Suez Canal each week has decreased by 67 per cent compared with the same period last year, and more than 20 per cent of global container trade passes through the Suez Canal.

"Considering that it was mainly large container ships that were diverted from the Suez Canal, the decline in container traffic was even greater," Hoffman said. Oil tanker traffic fell by 18 per cent, and bulk ship traffic carrying grain and coal also fell by 6 per cent. While natural gas transportation was flat.

Overall, 12 per cent to 15 per cent of global trade, or approximately 20,000 ships, pass through the Red Sea every year, travelling between Europe and Asia.

The situation is getting more serious as other international maritime trade routes are also in danger of being disrupted. Since Russia invaded Ukraine two years ago, the movement of goods through the Black Sea has been severely restricted, sending global grain prices soaring.

In addition, drought in Central America has caused water levels in the Panama Canal to drop, significantly reducing traffic through this important route.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development warned: "Long-term disruption of major trade routes will disrupt global supply chains, leading to delivery delays, increased costs and potential inflation." (ANI/CNA)

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUS Navy Secretary John C Phelan exits Trump administration amid West Asia conflict

NationalKarnataka: Woman sustains severe burns after husband set her on fire over refusal to attend family function

InternationalIranian President Pezeshkian slams US over 'hypocritical' stance amid ceasefire extension

InternationalFocus on education, skills to boost India-Germany ties: Newly appointed Honorary German Consul Abhay Mangaldas

NationalHimachal Pradesh: Shimla Police dismantles 19 major drug networks in 2026

International Realted Stories

International"We want to see unified response and unified proposal": Karoline Leavitt after ceasefire extension in West Asia conflict

InternationalTrump claims Iran halts execution of women protestors after his request

International"President Trump will dictate the timeline": White House Press Secretary on West Asia conflict

InternationalRajnath Singh tours TKMS shipyard, inspects Type 212 submarine in Germany

InternationalRajnath Singh visits submarine facility in Germany, observes Naval capabilities