Army Corps tamps down barge worries on Mississippi

Officials: Shipping shutdown averted

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The corps echoed that sentiment.

“We believe we will deepen the channel ahead of the worst-case river stage scenario, and I remain confident that navigation will continue,” Maj. Gen. John Peabody, commander of the Army Corps’ Mississippi Valley division, said in a statement this week.

“Rumors of a river closure have been greatly exaggerated,” Mike Petersen, an Army Corps spokesman in St. Louis, told The Associated Press. “We’re all working for the same thing – keeping the river open.”

Addressing the river – specifically at Thebes – has been a headache for the corps for months as the nation’s worst drought in decades stubbornly persists.

The depth of the Mississippi is regulated by dams north of St. Louis, and the depth increases south of Cairo, Ill., where the Ohio River converges. But the roughly 180-mile stretch from St. Louis to Cairo is approaching record lows. Experts say that if barges stop moving, billions of dollars of shipments of essentials such as corn, grain, coal and petroleum could be affected.

The trade groups renewed their call for presidential action requiring the Army Corps to increase the flow of water from an upper Missouri River dam in South Dakota. The corps cut the flow by two-thirds in November because of drought conditions in that region, reducing the amount of Missouri River water flowing into the Mississippi.

To compensate, the corps rushed in contractors last month to clear an estimated 890 cubic yards of limestone from the river bottom near Thebes – work that Petersen said has been “working fantastically” and should be completed by the end of January, perhaps sooner.

During that work, barge traffic at that stretch has been limited to an eight-hour window each day, causing bottlenecks of up to 20 vessels and 400 barges. The Coast Guard says more than 490 vessels still have made their way through, as of Thursday carrying 22,500 tons of cargo that’s enough to fill the equivalent of 425,000 tractor-trailers.

The corps also strategically has released water from at least two Midwest lakes – Iowa’s Red Rock Lake and southern Illinois’ Carlyle Lake, the latter recently accounting for two 6-inch rises in the Mississippi.

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