The seemingly unmovable Ever Given, a container ship the size of the Empire State Building that is currently lodged across the Suez Canal, has launched a million memes.

But the disruption it has caused to global trade is no laughing matter, and one of the world’s most popular retailers has sounded the alarm.

Multi-national behemoth Ikea has over 100 containers stuck in transit because of the bottleneck, according to Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet. The products in limbo reportedly include flatback beds and couches.

An Ikea spokesperson told CNN that the delay can “create constraints on our supply chain” if it persists.

German insurer Allianz estimates that the backup along the Suez Canal could cost the global economy $6 to $10 billion a week.

Bloomberg reports that machinery giant Caterpillar is considering lifting air products to bypass the glut.

Coffee and toilet paper are also among the consumer products stuck in the logjam, according to Business Insider.

And CNBC points out that all types of products are impacted, including “everything from the clothes and shoes you ordered online to gym equipment, electronics, food, and energy supplies — meaning gas prices could get higher, too.”

On Saturday, Bloomberg reported that it could take “at least a couple of days of dredging around the stuck container ship before enough sand and mud is cleared to attempt a refloat on a high tide.”

The U.S. Navy is sending a team of dredging experts to the canal, according to CNN.