Egypt’s Suez Canal Authority said Tuesday it will increase transit fees to 20%, up from the current 5%. The increase will cover vessels, including oil-laden tankers, passing through Suez Canal, one of the world’s most crucial waterways.
The Suez Canal Authority said it will add 15% to the normal transit fees for oil-laden and petroleum products-laden tankers. It said the increases will take effect from May 1.
It added that the review could later be revised or called off, according to changes in global shipping. The new increments are amendments to surcharge hikes imposed in March on vessels passing through the waterway, the canal said.
The canal said surcharge fees for chemical tankers, and other liquid bulk tankers will be hiked to 20% up from 10%, while laden and ballast dry bulk vessels will have their surcharges increase to 10%.
Vessels carrying vehicles, general cargo, and heavy lift vessels, as well as multi-purpose vessels, will see a 14% increase up from 7%, according to the canal.
Ballast crude oil and oil products tankers transiting the Canal are still required to pay a surcharge of 5% of normal transit fees, it said.
Observers say, the recent hike may not be unrelated to global shipping disruptions caused by the Russia-Ukraine impasse. Russia’s war on Ukraine is causing chaos for the global shipping industry. Three weeks ago, three of the world’s largest shipping giants groups, Maersk, Switzerland-based MSC, and France’s CMA CGM
suspended non-essential deliveries to Russia, adding to the country’s economic isolation following a raft of sanctions by the West.
The SCA added that “in line with the significant growth in global trade… and the waterway development and the enhancement of the transit service.”
Canal authorities have been working to widen and deepen the waterway’s southern part, where a hulking vessel ran aground and closed off the canal in March 2021. The six-day blockage disrupted global shipment.
About 10% of global trade, including 7% of the world’s oil, flows through the Suez Canal, which connects the Mediterranean and Red seas. For Egypt, the canal which first opened in 1869, is a source of both national pride and foreign currency.
Authorities said 20,649 vessels passed through the canal last year, a 10% increase compared to 18,830 vessels in 2020. The annual revenues of the canal reached $6.3 billion in 2021, the highest in its history.