Water levels are rising on the Mississippi and it will affect you

The Mississippi is getting back to normal
Shipping is picking up
Back to pre-drought levels
Dry conditions are to blame
The worst drought in years
Just 3 feet above sea level
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers comments
Everything is threatened
Saltwater is creeping up the Mississippi
Plaquemines Parish
Shipping is backed up
What are the costs?
Trade at a standstill
America could shut down
America's highway to the international world
Alan Barrent comments
Driving up inflation
The real losers in the situation
Will the situation get better?
The Mississippi is getting back to normal

After months of drought conditions that brought trade on the Mississippi River to stand still, water levels are finally returning to normal and that will affect you.

Shipping is picking up

"Shipping conditions on the lower Mississippi River are starting to return to normal as rain has picked up and water levels have improved," according to Currey McCullough of RFD-TV.

Back to pre-drought levels

McCullough noted that the Memphsis, Tennesse area is seeing upwards of an 18-foot rise in water levels which has brought the Mississippi back to its pre-October drought levels. But how did things get so bad in the first place?

Dry conditions are to blame

Months of dry conditions in the Ohio River Valley in September and October of 2022 seem to be to blame. The U.S. Drought Monitor estimated that roughly 77% percent of the country is currently facing abnormal dryness or drought conditions, and that has been bad for everyone. 

The worst drought in years

More than 134 million Americans were affected by the drought, a figure that the Drought Monitor reported was the worst since the severe drought of 2016. 

Just 3 feet above sea level

While the drought in middle America at the time limited the growing season and encouraged infestation and disease in certain crops, it also reduced the Mississippi River to just 3 feet above sea level in some areas. 

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers comments

"It's approaching some historical lows that we've never had here," said Heath Jones, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Chief of Emergency Management for the New Orleans District in an interview with the Atlantic. 

Everything is threatened

More than one-third of rainfall in the United States ends up in the Mississippi River, and that rainfall then feeds thousands of ecosystems and industries all along the river. Without adequate water levels, everything was threatened. 

Saltwater is creeping up the Mississippi

One of the biggest problems caused by the river's low water levels was the changing transition point of fresh water to salt water in the lower Mississippi. Saltwater quickly crept higher into the river and that had a serious impact on residents In Louisiana. 

Plaquemines Parish

The area that was most affected was New Orleans’ Plaquemines Parish, which was home to roughly 24,000 people and hundreds of water-dependent industries that require fresh water to stay in business. But national officials warned that the situation would affect the wider country as trade on the river slows.

Shipping is backed up

With water levels so low, trade along the Mississippi took a serious hit. Traffic jams and stuck barges were creating chaos all along the river. Bloomberg reported on October 7th that over 2000 shipping barges had backed up at various points along the river, and the situation hadn't improved. 

What are the costs?

According to the Port of New Orleans, roughly $130 billion dollars of goods are ferried along the Mississippi River annually, a figure that represents about 90% of American agricultural exports. 

Trade at a standstill

But all of this trade quickly reached a standstill as water levels continued to drop. Most shipping barges were unable to traverse the river at its low levels and the situation was dangerously close to shutting down all of America. 

America could shut down

“America is going to shut down if we shut down,” Mike Ellis, CEO of American Commercial Barge Line in Indiana, told the Wall Street Journal in mid-October.

America's highway to the international world

But how can the situation on the Mississippi River have had such drastic consequences for the country? Well, because the river is basically America’s highway to the international world. Everything from steel and coal to soybeans and wheat uses the Mississippi to access the global market, and this is having a serious impact on inflation. 

Alan Barrent comments

In an interview with NPR’s Ayesha Rascoe at the time, economist Alan Barret explained what the Mississippi’s low water levels meant for the flow of goods in America, and it wasn't good...

Driving up inflation

“If you think inflation is driving the cost of goods up, hold on to your debit cards because it could get worse thanks to the Mississippi River,” Barret said, “The river acts as a highway for critical goods, moving roughly 500 million tons' worth of products.”

The real losers in the situation

The real losers in the situation were consumers. The shipping backup on the Mississippi couldn't be remedied with an existing truck and rail infrastructure and it was thought that products would be stored and the costs associated with storage and transport would be passed onto the end consumer. 

Will the situation get better?

In the end, Americans were able to weather the storm with some clever management, and new rainfalls have helped bolster water levels all throughout the length of the Mississippi.

 

 

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