Current:Home > ContactLow Mississippi River limits barges just as farmers want to move their crops downriver -MoneyStream
Low Mississippi River limits barges just as farmers want to move their crops downriver
View
Date:2025-04-16 00:07:36
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A long stretch of hot, dry weather has left the Mississippi River so low that barge companies are reducing their loads just as Midwest farmers are preparing to harvest crops and send tons of corn and soybeans downriver to the Gulf of Mexico.
The transport restrictions are a headache for barge companies, but even more worrisome for thousands of farmers who have watched drought scorch their fields for much of the summer. Now they will face higher prices to transport what remains of their crops.
Farmer Bruce Peterson, who grows corn and soybeans in southeastern Minnesota, chuckled wryly that the dry weather had withered his family’s crop so extensively they won’t need to worry so much about the high cost of transporting the goods downriver.
“We haven’t had rain here for several weeks so our crop size is shrinking,” Peterson said. “Unfortunately, that has taken care of part of the issue.”
About 60% of U.S. grain exports are taken by barge down the Mississippi to New Orleans, where the corn, soybeans and wheat is stored and ultimately transferred to other ships. It’s usually an inexpensive, efficient way to transport crops, as a typical group of 15 barges lashed together carries as much cargo as about 1,000 trucks.
But as river levels drop, that cost has soared. The cargo rate from St. Louis southward is now up 77% above the three-year average.
Prices have risen because the river south of St. Louis does not remain consistently deep enough now to accommodate typical barges, forcing companies to load less into each vessel and string fewer barges together.
North of St. Louis, a series of locks and dams guarantees a 9-foot-deep (2.7-meter) channel as far north as Minneapolis-St. Paul. But that’s not the case in the lower Mississippi.
“We’re keeping things moving but could use some rain, some help from Mother Nature,” said Merritt Lane, president of Canal Barge Company of New Orleans.
Canal Barge, which works much of the Mississippi as well as the Illinois and Ohio rivers, has had to lighten loads so barges ride higher in the water. The company also can’t link as many barges together because the shipping lane is narrower, Lane said.
A narrowed shipping lane also means barges from different companies must squeeze into limited space, forcing backups and delays.
This is the second-straight year drought has caused the Mississippi to drop to near-record lows. With no significant rain in the forecast, it’s likely to keep falling.
The shallow river is especially striking given the height of the river just months ago. A huge snowpack in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin quickly melted, forcing riverfront communities such as Davenport, Iowa, and Savanna, Illinois, to hurriedly erect barriers to stay dry in late April and early May.
Though floodwaters quickly receded, they left behind mountains of underwater sand, forcing the Corps of Engineers to “dredge like crazy” to clear out a shipping channel, said Tom Heinold, who commands the Corps’ Rock Island district spanning 312 miles (500 kilometers) of the Mississippi from northern Iowa south to Missouri.
“After the flood came through this spring it was a touchy situation,” Heinold said. “In May and June we were jumping very quickly from place to place to try to get pilot channels open as the water was dropping.”
Northern stretches of the river are now in good shape, but dredging continues south of St. Louis, Heinold said.
Months of dry and warm weather have hit the Midwest hard, damaging crops in much of the region west of the Mississippi River. In Kansas, 40% of the soybean crop was reported in poor or very poor condition, with the same conditions for 40% of the corn crop in Missouri.
The Midwest grows most of the nation’s corn and soybeans. The percentage rated good to excellent nationwide was a little more than 50%, the worst rating in more than a decade.
Then there is the higher cost of shipping crops downriver.
Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition, said many Midwest farmers have multiple transport options, among them trucking and shipment by train for use by nearby ethanol and biodiesel plants and for processing into animal feed. But for grain exported from the U.S., the higher cost of shipping down the Mississippi hurts.
“It’s the way that farmers in the middle of the United States connect with the international marketplace,” said Steenhoek, whose group advocates for effective crop transportation systems. “It allows these farmers to have a very efficient way of moving their products a long distance in a very economical manner.”
Rising barge costs eating directly into farmers’ profits come at a time when American soybean and corn exports face increased international competition, he said.
From his work site beside the Mississippi River in Red Wing, Minnesota, Jim Larson watches as the river rises and falls through the seasons. He has seen plenty of droughts and floods during 30 years in the business and said it forces everyone who relies on the river to remain nimble.
“Some years you have flood and some years you have drought and sometimes you have them both in the same year,” said Larson, manager of Red Wing Grain, a storage and grain-loading operation. “It’s crazy and it seems like lately we’re having more of both, and so you have to be adaptable and change with the situation that is given to you. Kind of keeps you on your toes.”
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Feds offer up to $10 million reward for info on Hive ransomware hackers
- Climate change turns an idyllic California community into a 'perilous paradise'
- 'That level of violence is terrifying': Mexican cartel targets tranquil Puget Sound city
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Jennifer Garner jokingly calls out Mark Ruffalo, says he 'tried to drop out' of '13 Going on 30'
- Super Bowl 2024: How to watch the Chiefs v. 49ers
- 200-foot radio station tower stolen without a trace in Alabama, silencing small town’s voice
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Ryan Grubb returning to Seattle to be Seahawks' OC after brief stop at Alabama, per reports
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan is running for the US Senate
- Kelly Rizzo and Breckin Meyer Spotted on Sweet Stroll After Making Red Carpet Debut as a Couple
- Some charges dismissed after man charged in Dallas Zoo caper is found incompetent to stand trial
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Amazon Prime Video to stream exclusive NFL playoff game in 2024 season, replacing Peacock
- Guard Spencer Dinwiddie to sign with Lakers after clearing waivers
- What is Taylor Swift's net worth?
Recommendation
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
3 arrested on drug charges in investigation of killing of woman found in a container on a sandbar
Kevin Harlan, Olivia Harlan Dekker make Super Bowl 58 a family affair with historic broadcast feat
'That level of violence is terrifying': Mexican cartel targets tranquil Puget Sound city
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
On Lunar New Year, what celebrating the Vietnamese Tet holiday has taught me
Mapped: Super Bowl 58 teams, 49ers and Chiefs, filled with players from across the country
Mary J. Blige, Mariah Carey, Cher, Sade, Oasis and Ozzy Osbourne among Rock Hall nominees for ’24