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VESSEL ETA Status Location
HANJIN AFRICA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Sri Lanka
HANJIN ALGECIRAS no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN AMERICA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Malaysia
HANJIN AMI no revised ETA At anchor, not allowed to dock off Yantian, China
HANJIN AQUA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN ARGENTINA no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN ASIA no revised ETA sailing off coast of Egypt
ASIAN TRADER no revised ETA Scheduled to return to Busan reportedly out of fuel
HANJIN ATLANTA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN BALTIMORE no revised ETA Arrested Panama
HANJIN BLUE OCEAN no revised ETA sailing toward Singapore
HANJIN BOSAL no revised ETA At anchor off port of Valencia
HANJIN BOSTON no revised ETA Left port Los Angeles after unloading at anchor, waiting for instruction
HANJIN BREMERHAVEN no revised ETA off coast of Mexico
HANJIN BUDAPEST no revised ETA Sailing off coast of South Africa
HANJIN BUDDHA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Egypt
HANJIN BUENOS AIRES no revised ETA off coast of India
HANJIN CALIFORNIA no revised ETA Arrested Sydney
HANJIN CHENNAI no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN CHINA no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Kuala Lumpur
HANJIN CHONGQING no revised ETA Sailing toward Busan, South Korea
HANJIN CONSTANTZA no revised ETA off coast of Japan
HANJIN CROATIA no revised ETA off coast of Mexico
HANJIN CZECH no revised ETA At anchor China
HANJIN DALIAN no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN DALLAS no revised ETA At anchor China
HANJIN DUESSELDORF no revised ETA Embargo China
HANJIN DURBAN no revised ETA At anchor China
HANJIN EUROPE no revised ETA Embargo Germany
HANJIN FLORIDA no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Indonesia
HANJIN GDYNIA no revised ETA Berthed Long Beach 9/14 expected departure 9/19
HANJIN GENEVA no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Japan
HANJIN GERMANY no revised ETA Scheduled to return to Busan off coast of South Korea
HANJIN GOLD no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN GREECE no revised ETA Unloaded Long Beach waiting off coast California
HANJIN GREEN EARTH no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN GWANSEUM no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN HAMBURG no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN HARMONY no revised ETA Idling North Sea, off coast of France
HANJIN HO CHI MINH no revised ETA Arrested Port Chittagong
HANJIN HUNGARY no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Sri Lanka
HANJIN INDIGO no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Malaysia
HANJIN INDONESIA no revised ETA off coast of China
HANJIN ITALY no revised ETA waiting, Suez Canal
HANJIN JEBEL ALI no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN JUNGIL no revised ETA off coast of California
HANJIN KINGSTON no revised ETA Embargo China
HANJIN KOREA no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Singapore
HANJIN LONG BEACH no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN LOS ANGELES no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN LOUISIANA no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Singapore
HANJIN MANZANILLO no revised ETA Scheduled to return to Busan off coast of South Korea
HANJIN MAR no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN MARINE no revised ETA off coast of Canada/Prince Rupert/Vancouver
HANJIN MEXICO no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN MIAMI no revised ETA No decision made about discharging cargo off Port of New York
HANJIN MILANO no revised ETA off coast of Melbourne
MILLENIUM BRIGHT no revised ETA At anchor China
HANJIN MONACO no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN MONTEVIDEO no revised ETA Arrested Long Beach
HANJIN MUMBAI no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN NAMU no revised ETA Sailing off coast of South Korea
HANJIN NETHERLANDS no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Malaysia
HANJIN NEW JERSEY no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN NEW YORK no revised ETA off coast of Singapore
HANJIN NINGBO no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN NORFOLK no revised ETA Sailing to South Korea may encounter problems passing through Panama Canal
PACITA no revised ETA Taiwan returned to vessel owner
HANJIN PARIS no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN PIRAEUS 13/10/2016 Sailing toward Busan, South Korea
HANJIN PORT ADELAIDE no revised ETA Sailing off coast of China
HANJIN PORT KELANG no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Malaysia
HANJIN RIO DE JANEIRO no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN ROME no revised ETA Arrested Singapore
HANJIN ROTTERDAM no revised ETA Arrested China
HANJIN SANTOS no revised ETA At anchor off port of Algeciras
HANJIN SCARLET no revised ETA Arrested off Port of Prince Rupert
HANJIN SEATTLE no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN SHENZHEN no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Spain
SHIPPAN ISLAND no revised ETA At anchor Japan
SKY LOVE 18/09/2016 Busan returned to vessel owner
SKY PRIDE 19/09/2016 Busan
HANJIN SOOHO no revised ETA Arrested China
HANJIN SPAIN no revised ETA At anchor off coast of Spain
ST.MARY no revised ETA Scheduled to return to Busan off coast of South Korea
HANJIN SWITZERLAND no revised ETA At anchor Red Sea, has not yet passed through Suez; barred from passing
HANJIN TABUL no revised ETA waiting, Suez Canal
HANJIN TIANJIN no revised ETA Idling off coast of South Korea
HANJIN TURKEY no revised ETA Embargo China
HANJIN UNITED KINGDOM no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN VERSAILLES no revised ETA Sailing off coast of Senegal
HANJIN VIENNA no revised ETA Arrested Vancouver
HANJIN WHITE no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea
HANJIN XIAMEN 05/10/2016 Sailing off coast of South Africa
HANJIN YANTIAN no revised ETA At anchor off coast of South Korea

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The BOC Blast 153 – Recent Vessel Updates

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Recent Vessel Updates
As of Wednesday, of Hanjin’s 97 container ships, 36 were waiting outside of overseas ports, according to South Korea’s finance ministry. Of the reminder, 37 had yet to unload and planned to return to Korea, and 24 had unloaded in Korea and elsewhere, the ministry said (Reuters.com)
Hanjin American – anchored near Pangkor, Malaysia
Hanjin Ami – waiting outside Yantian, China, not allowed to dock
Asian Trader – heading to Busan, South Korea, but reportedly out of fuel
Hanjin Baltimore – Arrested by World Fuel Service outside of the Panama Canal, has not been allowed to
pass through
Hanjin Blue Ocean – moving slowly to Singapore
Hanjin Boston – arrived Port Los Angeles 9/13, unloaded containers, departed 9/16, now at anchor
“But instead of going to Oakland as planned, the master asked to anchor,” said J. Kip Louttit, executive
director of the Marine Exchange of Southern California. He said Friday afternoon the ship had departed
for Oakland. (AmericanShipper.com)
Hanjin California – arrested in Sydney
Hanjin Chongqing –  headed to Busan, South Korea
Hanjin Europe – under embargo in Hamburg, Germany
Hanjin Greece – unloaded port Long Beach, now off the coast of California
Hanjin Gdynia – arrived Long Beach 9/14, expected departure 9/19 (2 days at anchor, 2 days at berth), and
sail to Tokyo (J. Kip Louttit, executive director of the Marine Exchange of Southern
California)(AmericanShipper.com)
Hanjin Harmony – waiting in the North Sea, off coast of France
Hanjin Jungil – off the coast of California
Hanjin Miami – No decision has been made about discharging cargo on the M/V Hanjin Miami.  As soon as
there is more information available, we will share that with you (Port of New York)
Hanjin Montevideo, arrested in Long Beach, “remains at anchor inside the Long Beach Breakwater and we
still have no information on future movements,” said J. Kip Louttit, executive director of the Marine
Exchange of Southern California(AmericanShipper.com)
Hanjin Netherlands – anchored near Pangkor, Malaysia
Hanjin Norfolk – Heading to Pusan, may encounter issues attempting to pass through Panama Canal.
Pacita – returned to vessel owner
Hanjin Rome – arrested in Singapore
Hanjin Rotterdam – arrested in Yantian
Sky Love – returned to vessel owner
Sky Pride – returned to vessel owner
Hanjin Sooho – arrested in Shanghai
Hanjin Switzerland – Anchored in the Red Sea, has not yet passed through the Suez Canal, and is being barred from doing so
Hanjin Vienna – arrested in Vancouver
Other Hanjin Updates
Port of Houston (PHA)
Effective immediately, the International Office of the ILA will no longer supply labor for Hanjin containers.  Until further notice, all Hanjin containers will remain on hold. Those containers that have already been released by PHA will be placed back on hold for now.  As this situation develops, we will confirm the status of these units and their payments.
Port of Norfolk
As a result of decisions made by the International Longshoreman’s Association (ILA), based on the Hanjin Shipping bankruptcy, actions are being taken along the East Coast, which will affect The Port of Virginia facilities. Please be advised of the following:
Effective immediately, no Hanjin import loads can be delivered/out-gated from any Port of Virginia
terminal.
Empty containers are not impacted by this decision.  We continue to accept Hanjin empties at the
PPCY.
This is a dynamic and evolving situation and further communication is anticipated.
You may contact our Customer Service Team at 757-440-7160, or POVCustomerService@vit.org.
Port of New York
Procedures Announcement Regarding Hanjin Cargo and Equipment
As a result of the recent news about Hanjin Shipping’s severe financial difficultly and operating status, the following procedures are currently in place in The Port of New York and New Jersey for Hanjin cargo and equipment.
Maher Terminals
All Hanjin import deliveries must be pre-paid in either cash or credit, if already established with
Maher Terminals. Please contact the Maher Terminals Hot Line at 908-527-8200 Ext 3875 for
information on the charges due.
Hanjin exports will no longer be received at Maher Terminals. Hanjin will not accept any new
bookings and any previous bookings will be cancelled. For export containers that are already
gated-in, bookings will be cancelled.  Containers should be picked up, stripped and returned to a
location designated by Hanjin.
Hanjin empty containers will also no longer be received at either Maher’s main terminal or at the
Empty Depot at Columbia.
9/16 – The International Longshoremen’s Association said Friday afternoon that it has reversed its stance, and will handle cargo from ships operated by the now insolvent South Korean ocean carrier Hanjin Shipping (AmericanShipper.com)
9/16 – Judge John Sherwood of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Newark, N.J. at a hearing refused to reverse an order forbidding creditors from arresting Hanjin’s ships despite the protests of fuel companies and providers of tug services (AmericanShipper.com)
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Hanjin Aims to Sell More Than Half Its Ships
Sales are part of rehabilitation plan to be submitted to Korean court
Debt-ridden Hanjin Shipping Co. is working on a restructuring plan that calls for the drastic reduction of its owned fleet and returning the vast majority of the ships it charters to their owners, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter.
Despite the efforts, these people say the most likely scenario is still that the Korean operator— the world’s seventh-biggest in terms of capacity—will be liquidated, marking one of the shipping industry’s biggest failures.
Hanjin filed for bankruptcy protection last month. The South Korean government has strongly indicated it has no plans to bail out the company.
A Korean court will decide in December whether to accept the plan or let the company go under, according to court officials in Seoul.
One person with knowledge of Hanjin’s efforts to restructure said the operator is considering a number of scenarios but focusing on one that involves Hanjin keeping up to 15 of its 37 ships, and returning to owners almost all of the 61 chartered vessels. Under that scenario, which is subject to approval by the bankruptcy court, “Hanjin will emerge as a small regional operator in Asia that will move a small part of Korea’s exports,” the person said.
Hanjin didn’t return calls for comment.
Since Hanjin filed for bankruptcy in Korea in late August, dozens of its ships have been denied access to ports around the world due to uncertainty about who would pay docking fees and container-storage and unloading bills. Those ships are carrying half a million containers with cargo valued at more than $14 billion. Some of them have been seized by the company’s creditors.
The Korean carrier moves roughly 3% of containers globally and up to 10% of those shipped between Asia and Europe. Some 25,000 containers cross the Pacific daily on Hanjin ships.
About 95% of the world’s manufactured goods—from designer dresses to laptops—are moved in containers.The disruption in the supply chain comes as retailers in the U.S. and Europe are stocking their shelves for the year-end holiday season.
Hanjin confirmed this week that it had returned five of its chartered vessels to their owners. A Korean government statement on Thursday said 73 vessels were still at sea, of which 37 were being told to return to Korea. The rest were near ports but stayed out on fears they would be seized by creditors.
Hanjin’s main charterers, including  Danaos Corp., Navios Maritime Partners LP and  Seaspan Corp. with a combined exposure of more than $1 billion to Hanjin, were hoping for a last-minute intervention by the Korean government that would allow Hanjin to honor its vessel-leasing commitments. That looks less and less likely.
“Hanjin now has two alternatives: either to drastically downsize or to liquidate,” said Iraklis Prokopakis, Danaos’s chief operating officer. “We have eight ships chartered to Hanjin and five will be returned. The other three still have cargo on them so I don’t know what will happen.”
Danaos has a $560 million exposure to Hanjin.
Mr. Prokopakis said the key issue at the December court hearing will be whether Hanjin has enough cash to continue operating, even at a much smaller scale.
But with Hanjin’s main creditor, state-run Korean Development Bank, showing no intention to pump more cash into the ailing carrier, few executives in the shipping industry believe it will manage to stay in business.
“Any cash Hanjin still has will go to get its ships safely to ports and unload the cargo,” said Lars Jensen, chief executive of Copenhagen-based SeaIntelligence Consulting. “I expect them to start selling their own ships when the legal issues with creditors are settled.”
Selling the ships won’t be easy. The majority of Hanjin’s fleet are Panamaxes, which carry fewer than 10,000 containers. Such vessels are fast becoming outdated in the wake of the widening of the Panama Canal earlier this year. That expansion allows ships moving 12,000 containers or more to pass through the isthmus.
“So their only true valuable assets are four 13,000-container ships,” Mr. Jensen said. Hanjin may try to hang on to them hoping to become part of an alliance when the mess clears up, he said, “but more likely they may sell them as customers won’t want any of their cargo on Hanjin ships. The trust is gone.”
The Korean government said this week it is asking courts to protect Hanjin ships from being seized in Spain, Germany, the Netherlands, and Italy. It plans to do the same next week in countries including Australia, India and the United Arab Emirates. Such a legal protection is already in place in Korea, the U.S.,  Japan, the U.K. and Singapore, it says.
—Kwanwoo Jun in Seoul contributed to this article.

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A lawyer for Hanjin Shipping Co Ltd (117930.KS), the failed South Korean container carrier, said on Thursday a U.S.-bound vessel was held “hostage” by disputes over payments, adding to the struggles in getting $14 billion of cargo off its ships stranded at sea.
“There is no clear visibility yet on what will happen with this business,” Hanjin lawyer Ilana Volkov said at a hearing, when asked by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Sherwood whether Hanjin was liquidating.
Hanjin, the world’s seventh-largest container line, filed for bankruptcy last month, leaving more than 100 ships and their cargo at sea and threatening to snarl U.S. freight traffic as the year-end shopping season approaches.
Some ships chartered to Hanjin have been sold and more are up for sale.
Last week, Hanjin said a Korean judge authorized $10 million to pay tug operators, ports and cargo handlers to unload four of its U.S.-bound vessels.
Since then, the Hanjin Boston, Hanjin Greece and Hanjin Gdynia have begun to unload. But the fourth ship, the Hanjin Jungil, remains at sea off the coast of California, according to the Marine Exchange of Southern California.
“We’re negotiating with every service provider and they are saying ‘I’m not going to let this ship berth,'” said Volkov at the Newark, New Jersey hearing. “My client is being held hostage.“
She told the court that the Korean court had postponed hearing Hanjin’s request to authorize another $50 million that would allow at least four more Hanjin ships to unload U.S. cargo.
As of Wednesday, of Hanjin’s 97 container ships, 36 were waiting outside of overseas ports, according to South Korea’s finance ministry. Of the reminder, 37 had yet to unload and planned to return to Korea, and 24 had unloaded in Korea and elsewhere, the ministry said.
In addition to the nine “base ports” already identified for Hanjin ships to unload, the ministry said efforts were being made for Bangkok, Jebel Ali, Kobe, Melbourne and Valencia to be available for unloading Hanjin ships.
The company was seeking stay order this week that would allow its ships to unload safely in Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and Italy, the ministry said, with more to follow.
The ministry said efforts were underway to enable unloading in New York and Singapore by this weekend.
Hanjin still has at least 10 U.S.-bound ships, although Volkov said some ships may not have picked up U.S.-bound cargo.
Cargo owners such as consumer products maker Dorel Industries Inc (DIIb.TO) and the U.S. unit of musical instrument maker Yamaha Corp (7951.T) complained they were the hostages.
They said they were forced to make additional payments to get their cargo or were forced to retrieve it from the wrong location.
“This could destroy American businesses,” said Alan Brody, a lawyer for Yamaha Corp of America.
Darren Azman, an attorney for Bermuda-based container owner Textainer Group Holdings Ltd (TGH.N), said Hanjin rejected leases on its 20,000 containers but failed to return the boxes to Asia as required.
However, the judge balked at Azman’s suggestion that Textainer could force cargo owners to pay to return Hanjin’s containers to Asia to get their goods.
“I will do whatever I can to stop you,” said Sherwood.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Addtiional reporting by TOny Munroe in Seoul, editing by Peter Henderson, Bernard Orr and Lincoln Feast)

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Customer Advisory Hanjin Shipping
Dear Valued Customer,
As most customers are already aware, due to the court receivership filing in Seoul Korea, Hanjin Shipping can no longer provide intermodal service or store door delivery service in North America and all cargo must now be terminated at the marine terminal of discharge.
For cargo that was already processed as intermodal transit, the delivery will be terminated at the final rail ramp. Please urgently contact your sales representative to arrange cargo diversion for all cargo still remaining on board or in the process of discharge.
We sincerely apologize for this inconvenience however this is the fastest way for our customers to access their cargo at this time.
[Vessel Status] (HJS operated vessels)
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Port of Kaohsiung Damage Related to Typhoon Meranti
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The BOC Blast 148 – Typhoon Highlights

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Typhoon Highlights
Super Typhoon Meranti remains a Category 5 in the western Pacific Ocean.
Significant impacts from this dangerous typhoon are likely in Taiwan, the northern Philippines and southeast China.
Sustained winds were 185 mph, with gusts up to 225 mph, as of Tuesday morning, U.S. time.
BOC will continue to monitor, and update, as more information becomes available.

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Hanjin Vessel Status
Exactly Where Is the Hanjin Fleet?
September 12, 2016 by The Loadstar, by Gavin van Marle
(excerpted from Gcaptain.com)
Unloading operations have begun on some Hanjin vessels after the line finally began to update shippers and forwarders on where its vessels actually are. A fleet update issued by the carrier this morning shows the vast majority of its vessels still “waiting in open sea” for instructions from headquarters.
So far six vessels are confirmed to have been arrested – the Hanjin Baltimore at Panama, with the Panama Canal “impassable” to the line; Hanjin Vienna in Vancouver; Hanjin California in Sydney; Hanjin Rome, as widely reported, in Singapore; and Hanjin Rotterdam in Yantian; and Hanjin Sooho in Shanghai; while the Hanjin Montevideo has been arrested by its bunker supplier in Long Beach, California.
Another seven vessels are at port under embargo and three more – Sky Pride, Sky Love and Pacita – have been returned to their owners. Ten vessels are waiting off the coast of China and two off Japan; a further 12 are waiting off South Korea, two of which – Hanjin Chongqing and Asian Trader – have now run out of fuel and are waiting for bunker supplies. Another nine vessels are underway to Pusan, where they won’t run the risk of arrest.
The Hanjin Europe is under embargo in Hamburg, with Hanjin Harmony waiting in the North Sea, while five vessels wait in the Mediterranean. Two of the latter were refused entry to the Suez Canal and now face circumventing the Cape of Good Hope on their journey to Asia. There are nine vessels waiting in the waters of South-east Asia, the Indian Ocean and around Australia, and a further three in the Arabian Gulf.
In the US, Hanjin Greece began unloading at a Long Beach terminal, while five vessels wait off the coast, with reports that one, the Hanjin Gdynia, will dock this week. The berthing of the Hanjin Greece followed a US court order on Friday extending Hanjin’s provisional protection from creditors, and some $10m has reportedly been raised by Hanjin to pay terminal handling charges for the two vessels, as well as Hanjin Jungil and Hanjin Boston, also waiting to berth at Long Beach and Los Angeles respectively.
Hanjin Shipping secures $45 million, more may take ‘considerable time’
September 13, 2016 by Reuters
(excerpted from Reuters.com)
The chairman of Hanjin Group transferred 40 billion won ($36 million) to Hanjin Shipping on Tuesday to help unload cargo stranded on the troubled shipper’s vessels, a spokesman said, but regulators warned securing further funds could take “considerable time.”
The parent of Hanjin Shipping pledged last week to raise 100 billion won to help rescue cargo in the wake of the collapse of the world’s seventh-biggest container shipper, including the 40 billion won from Chairman Cho Yang-ho.
About $9 million pledged by Choi Eun-young, a former chairwoman of Hanjin Shipping, has also come in, the shipper said.
Around $14 billion of cargo has been tied up globally as ports, tugboat operators and cargo handling firms worried about not being paid refused to work for Hanjin, which filed for receivership in a Seoul court early this month.
Shipping submitted early last week to a South Korean court that it could take an estimated 173 billion won ($154.5 million) to unload all stranded cargo, a Seoul Central District Court judge told Reuters.
Risks in Australia – In Sydney, the Hanjin California, which docked on Sept. 3, remained held in port following a Federal Court order filed by Glencore Singapore Pte over unpaid fuel bills. Most of the containers on the 182-meter-long vessel have been offloaded, but some destined for other ports were still being held, port authorities said.
Six other Hanjin vessels were heading to Australia and risked being seized by creditors, two sources familiar with the situation said.
Unlike in the United States, Britain, Japan and provisionally Singapore, Hanjin has no protection in Australia against creditors for unpaid bills.
“It’s likely someone will put a claim on the assets,” said one of the sources, who declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.
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Hanjin Vessel Status
Hanjin Switzerland – Anchored in the Red Sea, has not yet passed through the Suez Canal, and is being barred from doing so.
Hanjin Baltimore – Arrested by World Fuel Services outside of the Panama Canal, has not been allowed to pass.
Hanjin Ami – Anchored outside of Yantian, has not been allowed into dock.
Hanjin Norfolk – Heading to Pusan, may encounter issues when attempting to pass through Panama Canal.

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