Build the Insurance & Cyber Skills You Need to Advance Your Career

2021 — Suez Canal Blockage (Ever Given)

Category: Marine / Supply Chain / Global Trade Disruption Date: March 23–29, 2021

Summary

On March 23, 2021, the Ever Given — one of the world’s largest container ships — ran aground in the Suez Canal during high winds, wedging itself diagonally across the waterway. For six days, the canal was completely blocked, halting nearly 12% of global trade and delaying billions of dollars in cargo. The event exposed the fragility of global supply chains, triggered complex marine‑insurance disputes, and highlighted the systemic risk posed by mega‑vessels in chokepoints like the Suez Canal.

Background

By 2021, global shipping had consolidated around:

The Suez Canal is one of the most critical of these chokepoints:

This made the canal a single point of failure for global commerce.

What Happened

The grounding

On March 23, 2021, amid high winds and poor visibility, the Ever Given lost navigational control and struck the canal bank. The bow embedded in the eastern wall; the stern lodged in the western wall. The ship became a 1,300‑foot steel cork in a 1,000‑foot channel.

Global trade froze

The salvage operation

A multinational team of tugboats, dredgers, and engineers worked for six days to free the vessel. On March 29, the Ever Given was refloated during a high tide.

Economic shockwaves

The blockage delayed:

Global supply chains felt the effects for months.

Claims Impact

1. General Average declared

The shipowner declared General Average, requiring cargo owners to contribute to salvage costs before receiving their goods. This triggered:

2. Business interruption across global supply chains

Manufacturers and retailers suffered:

Most BI losses were not covered, because they did not arise from physical damage.

3. Liability disputes

Key questions emerged:

Multiple parties faced potential liability.

4. P&I Club exposure

The ship’s Protection & Indemnity (P&I) Club faced:

This became one of the largest P&I events in recent history.

Regulatory / Legal Impact

1. Suez Canal Authority claims

The SCA initially sought $900 million in compensation for:

The ship was detained until a settlement was reached.

2. Renewed scrutiny of mega‑vessels

Regulators and maritime experts questioned:

3. Contractual disputes across industries

The blockage triggered:

It became a case study in systemic trade disruption.

* force‑majeure claims (claims that a contract cannot be performed due to extraordinary events outside the parties’ control)

In supply‑chain and shipping disputes, force‑majeure is invoked when an unforeseeable event — like a canal blockage — prevents a party from fulfilling contractual obligations.

** demurrage disputes (disputes over fees charged when cargo or vessels are delayed beyond the allotted loading/unloading time)

Demurrage compensates shipowners for time lost when cargo sits too long at port or when vessels are stuck waiting. The Suez blockage triggered a global wave of demurrage claims as ships idled for days.

Market Impact

1. Marine‑insurance recalibration

Carriers reassessed:

2. Supply‑chain risk modeling

Uri (freeze) and COVID had already stressed supply chains; the Suez blockage made clear that non‑catastrophe events could produce catastrophe‑scale losses.

3. Increased demand for cargo insurance

Shippers sought:

4. Logistics and shipping reforms

The event accelerated:

Why It Matters

The Suez Canal blockage revealed:

It is a defining event in the modern supply‑chain‑risk arc — a reminder that a single ship, stuck in the wrong place, can disrupt the global economy.

Cross‑Links

Related Entries

 

Thanks for Visiting Us!
Would you mind answering 3 quick questions so we can better serve insurance professionals?

How useful have you found Insurance Designation Lookup to be as a way to explore insurance designation options?

Would anything make it more helpful to you or a colleague?

Would you recommend it to a colleague?