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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mississippi River slowed by drought

Army Corps of Engineers: ‘The worst is ahead of us’

Hundreds of barges are stuck north and south of Greenville, Miss., due to low water on the Mississippi River Tuesday. (Associated Press)
David Zucchino Los Angeles Times

Even in the best of times, the Mississippi River is a slow and torpid thoroughfare. But when a drought persists and the muddy waters recede, squeezing barges through the narrow channels becomes an expensive, and sometimes impossible, chore.

The great summer drought of 2012 has closed lower sections of the river, shut down harbors and forced barges to run aground as river levels drop to near-record lows. With no significant rains in sight, authorities responsible for keeping the Mississippi open for commerce say things are likely to get worse before they get better.

Early Wednesday, nearly 100 towboats and barges were backed up near Greenville, Miss., at an 11-mile stretch of river shut down after a barge ran aground overnight. The barge was freed and refloated Wednesday afternoon, but normal two-way traffic was restricted one way, Petty Officer Ryan Tippets of the U.S. Coast Guard in New Orleans said.

By late afternoon, two vessels were moving northbound, to be followed by southbound vessels overnight, Tippets said.

“We’ve gone from a superhighway to a little one-lane road,” said Robert Anderson of the Mississippi River Commission in Vicksburg, Miss., established by Congress in 1879 to promote commerce on the river.

The backups are delaying grain and industrial products headed to markets, costing barge owners at least $10,000 a day, Anderson said. Every year, about 180 million tons of cargo flow up and down the Mississippi’s 700-mile southern section between Cairo, Ill., and Baton Rouge, La. – a vital conduit in the nation’s transfer of goods. A typical barge carries 1,600 tons, versus 100 tons for a rail car and 25 tons for a tractor-trailer.

River depth has dropped to just 9 feet at the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, down from a record 61.7 feet at the height of last year’s Mississippi River floods, Anderson said. River flow has dropped to 200,000 cubic feet per second from a high of 2.5 million cubic feet per second during those floods.

The Mississippi’s all-time record low was set during the devastating 1988 drought that caused an estimated $1 billion in losses. The river was recorded at minus 10.7 feet at Memphis that year. The level at Memphis on Wednesday was minus 8.9 feet, Anderson said.

If the drought continues, river levels at Memphis could conceivably set a record low, said Rene Poche of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Memphis. “We don’t know what quantity of rain we need, but we do need a lot of it,” Poche said.

Low flow levels have closed at least four of the 19 harbors between Cairo and New Orleans, Anderson said, and at least a dozen barges have run aground in August.

Many barge owners are now carrying lighter loads, costing them more per ton to move cargo but also reducing chances of running aground. The barges transport corn, soybeans, wheat, coal, chemicals, petroleum products, fertilizer and construction materials.

The effect on consumer food prices is likely to be slight unless there are long and extended river closures, said Donald C. Sweeney, associate director of the Center for Transportation Studies at the University of Missouri, St. Louis. Most corn, soybeans and wheat are shipped to overseas markets, Sweeney said.

Eight dredges are working two 12-hour shifts a day, trying to clear the river’s main navigation channel along a 1,200-mile section from St. Louis to New Orleans, Anderson said. A ninth dredge is to be added next week.

The lower Mississippi normally records its lowest annual levels in September and October, Anderson said. But the river reached dangerously low levels beginning in July.

“The worst is ahead of us,” Maj. Gen. John W. Peabody, commander of the corps’ Mississippi Valley Division, told officials at a water control meeting in Memphis, Tenn., this week.