The
Suez Canal runs north to south across the Isthmus of Suez in Northeastern
Egypt.
The
Suez Canal (Qanâ el Suweis) forms a 163 km (101 mile) Ship
Canal in Egypt between Port Said (Bûr Sa'îd) on the
Mediterranean and Suez (El Suweis) on the Red Sea.
Before
the construction of the canal, some transport was conducted by offloading
ships and carrying the goods overland between the
Mediterranean
and the Red Sea.
The
canal provides an important shortcut for ships operating between
both European and East Coast American ports and ports located in
southern Asia, eastern Africa, and Oceania.
With
a length of about 195 kilometers (121 miles) and a minimum channel
width of 60 meters (197 feet), the canal is able to accommodate
ships as large as 150,000 tons fully loaded. Because no locks interrupt
traffic on this sea level waterway, the transit time only averages
15 hours.
A
French company led by Ferdinand deLesseps contracted with Egypt
to build the Suez Canal. After ten years of work, the canal opened
in 1869. The canal was jointly owned by the Egyptian government
and France. The first ship to pass through the canal did so on February
17, 1867. It is estimated that 1.5 million Egyptians worked
on the canal and 125,000 died, many due to cholera. The Egyptian
ruler, Ismail, celebrated by building a huge palace in Cairo. Ismail
treated royalty from around the world to a celebration in honour
of the new canal. The heavy spending for the celebration came at
a time when the price of Egyptian cotton plunged. Egypt had gone
into debt to pay for the Suez Canal and Ismail was forced to take
out loans from European banks which he was unable to repay. Consequently
he was forced to sell the canal to Great Britain.
Soon
after, the British sent soldiers into Egypt, saying they were concerned
for their property and for many years, the British controlled the
Suez Canal.
On
July 26, 1956, Egypt seized the canal, which caused
Britain, France and Israel to invade in the week-long Suez War.
Led by the United States who did not want such an important route
held by countries they could not control, the United Nations declared
the canal Egyptian property.
The
canal closed for eight years in 1967 after Egypt
lost a disastrous six-day war with Israel. After the war, Israel
controlled the Sinai penisula, which includes the east bank of the
canal. The canal reopened in 1975 after tensions
cooled. Egypt and Israel agreed to a peace treaty four years later.
A
UN peacekeeping force has been stationed in the Sinai Peninsula
since 1974.
Today
the Suez Canal is open to every nation.
The
canal has no locks because there is no sea level difference. Passage
through the canal is monitored by "Stations" which note
the passing of vessels and control movement. There are three
sections of the canal which allow vessels to pass each other.
These are between Stations 1 & 2. Bahrah el Tumsah and the Great
Bitter Lake. The canal allows ships with up to 15 meters (50 feet)
of draft to pass, and improvements are planned to increase this
to 22 m (72 feet) by 2010 to allow supertanker passage. Presently
supertankers can offload part of their load onto a canal-owned boat
and reload at the other end of the canal.
Some
15,000 ships pass through the canal each year, bearing about 14%
of world shipping.
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