The Panama Canal Authority yesterday said the consortium led by Spanish builder Sacyr stopped work after negotiations broke down, but the company later announced that it made a "final offer" to prevent a shutdown.
The two sides have locked horns since December over overruns on widening the canal to accomodate massive cargo ships in the century-old waterway, which handles five percent of global seaborne trade.
Panama Canal Authority administrator Jorge Quijano said the "inflexible position" of the consortium known as Grupos Unidos por el Canal (GUPC) had derailed the negotiations.
"We demand the work be restarted immediately," Quijano said, adding that a proposal to cancel the GUPC contract is still on the table.
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President Ricardo Martinelli tried to rally his countrymen's support for their signature global brand.
"We are going to finish the canal expansion rain or shine," the president stressed. "Let's close ranks with the Panama Canal Authority.
"I don't know who these people think they are," Martinelli went on. "They signed a contract, won the bidding, and then don't do the job...It is unheard of."
"What happened is that the ACP (canal authority) rejected our last proposal without proposing a viable alternative, and this is why we released the statement," Manrique told Spain's Cadena Ser radio.
"But later we sent a letter proposing to continue and so we will see what happens... We have made a final offer to the canal (authority)," he said, adding that there was "no concrete date" to suspend the work.
The project to widen the canal, one of the biggest civil engineering operations in the world, is due to be completed next year but GUPC has said that the dispute threatens to delay completion by up to five years.
In its earlier statement, Sacyr said the collapse of the talks "puts in danger the widening of the canal and up to 10,000 jobs.