As
Mississippi water levels decrease, Obama asked to declare emergency
29
November, 2012
If
barge flow is lessened along the nation's busiest waterway on the
Mississippi River, it could spell economic disaster and that's why
shippers and legislators are pushing President
Obama to
declare a federal emergency.
Bloomberg reports
the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and
the National
Association of Manufacturers are
among those asking the president to speed up rock removal in Cairo,
Ill., that could affect barge traffic with low water levels. The
group is also asking the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineersto
halt its annual restriction of the Missouri River's flow.
Mississippi
River barge traffic has slowed due to the worst drought in fifty
years and a seasonal dry period that has left levels at a near
all-time low, according to the report.
Barges
contain nearly 60 percent of the country's grain exports in addition
to 22 percent of its petroleum and 20 percent of its coal on the
Mississippi.
Drought-Parched
Mississippi River Is Halting Barges
Mississippi
River barge traffic is slowing as the worst drought in five decades
combines with a seasonal dry period to push water levels to a
near-record low, prompting shippers to seek alternatives.
28
November, 2012
River
vessels are cutting loads on the nation’s busiest waterway while
railroads sign up new business and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
draws criticism from lawmakers over its management of the river,
which could be shut to cargo from companies including
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. (ADM) next month.
“Our
shippers are looking at alternate modes of transportation,” said
Marty Hettel, senior manager of bulk sales for AEP River Operations,
the barge unit of American Electric Power Co. (AEP), a utility owner
based in Columbus, Ohio. “If you’re shipping raw materials to a
steel mill in Chicago, you’re trying to figure out if you can go to
Cincinnati or Louisville, Kentucky, unload it out of the barge and
rail it up to the steel mill.”
The
worst U.S. drought since 1956, which dried farmland from Ohio to
Nebraska, will last at least through February in most areas,
according to the U.S. Climate Prediction Center in College Park,
Maryland. Barges on the Mississippi handle about 60 percent of the
nation’s grain exports entering the Gulf of Mexico through New
Orleans, as well as 22 percent of its petroleum and 20 percent of its
coal.
‘Economic
Catastrophe’’
Barge,
shipping and business organizations including the National
Association of Manufacturers, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the
American Petroleum Institute in a letter today urged President Barack
Obama to declare an emergency in the region, calling for “immediate
assistance in averting an economic catastrophe in the heartland” of
the U.S.
Jay
Carney, the White House spokesman, said the administration has sought
drought relief for farmers, and today referred questions about the
request to the Corps of Engineers
Senator
Tom Harkin, an Iowa Democrat, also said Obama must act. “We need
action to increase water flow from the Missouri River into the
Mississippi,” Harkin said in an e-mail. “We also need to take
immediate steps to enable the destruction of rock formations under
the Mississippi River, which will allow navigation with less water.”
Mississippi
water levels may drop to an historic low next month. The waterway is
falling in part because of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which
last week started reducing outflows from the Missouri River as part
of an annual operating plan to ensure regions further north have
adequate water.
Shallow
Water
That
may help make the Mississippi too shallow to navigate by Dec. 10 from
St. Louis south about 180 miles (290 kilometers) to Cairo, Illinois,
where the Mississippi meets the Ohio River, according to the American
Waterways Operators and Waterways Council Inc., a trade group based
in Arlington, Virginia. About $7 billion worth of commodities usually
travel on the Mississippi in December and January, according to the
organization.
“It
is imperative that the Corps review their actions to ensure they
address this problem so it doesn’t impact waterborne commerce,”
said Angela Graves, a spokeswoman for Marathon Petroleum Corp. (MPC),
which operates a fleet of 180 barges and 15 tugboats to ship crude
oil, transportation fuels and petroleum products on waterways, in a
telephone interview.
December
and January are historically the lowest times of year for the rivers
because the fall season is usually dry and tributaries freeze, said
Steve Buan, service coordination hydrologist at the U.S. North
Central River Forecast Center in Chanhassen, Minnesota.
‘Ice
Bite’
“That’s
called the ice bite, the water gets made into ice and it can’t flow
downstream,” Buan said.
The
record low in St. Louis was minus-6.1 feet in January 1940, according
to the National Weather Service. The river was at minus-1.49 feet at
1:30 p.m. on Nov. 26, and may drop to minus-5 or even minus-6 feet as
measured by the river gauge in about two weeks if the weather doesn’t
change and the Army Corps of Engineers drawdown of the Missouri River
takes place as planned, Buan said.
About
8 million tons of grain, coal, steel, petroleum and other goods
travel each month between St. Louis and Cairo, said Hettel, with AEP
River Operations.
Shutting
the river will increase transportation costs for shippers, he said.
They’ll continue to pay full price for barges lightened to meet
narrower depth restrictions. Only a few tugs are capable of operating
with depth restrictions expected in December, he said.
Transport
Options
Decatur,
Illinois-based ADM, the largest U.S. grain processor, is “monitoring
the situation closely and making arrangements for alternative
transportation methods, in case they’re necessary,” said
spokeswoman Jackie Anderson in an e- mail.
Enterprise
Products Partners (EPD) LP is running Mississippi barges partly empty
to cope with shallow water, spokesman Rick Rainey of the
Houston-based pipeline company said yesterday in a telephone
interview. Of its 200-vessel fleet, two barges that when fully loaded
carry about 60,000 barrels, are operating on the Mississippi, Rainey
said.
Rail
shipments to export terminals in the week ending Nov. 14 were up 16
percent from the same period in 2011, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Meanwhile, Mississippi River barge traffic
south was down 29 percent and northbound shipping declined 8.9
percent from a year ago in the week that ended Nov. 17, according to
the Army Corps of Engineers.
Trains
Gain
Low
water on the Mississippi means that Canadian National Railway Co.,
(CNR) based in Montreal, is “currently handling more business as a
result of the situation while remaining focused on protecting its
existing rail traffic base,” said company spokesman Mark Hallman.
Kansas
City Southern (KSU) is “working with our customers to ensure that
we are in a position to meet any increase in rail demand due to the
reduction in river capacity,” said Bill Galligan, vice president
for investor relations of the Kansas City, Missouri-based company, in
an email.
“It
will definitely be a positive for the rails,” said Lee Klaskow, a
Skillman, New Jersey-based analyst for Bloomberg Industries research.
Still, the changes in shipping costs may cause delays, he said. “It
gets to the question, ‘Is the freight competitive with railroad?’”
he said. “If it’s too expensive to ship, sometimes it makes sense
for whoever’s shipping to wait it out.”
Disaster
Request
Fifteen
U.S. senators, 62 members of the House and the governors Illinois,
Iowa and Missouri wrote the Corps asking it to delay water-reducing
actions and and remove rocks that impede traffic. The Mississippi “is
vital to commerce for agriculture and many other goods,” the
lawmakers, including Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois, that chamber’s
second-ranking Democrat, wrote.
The
Army Corps is following the instructions of Congress that directed
management of the Missouri River, which flows into the Mississippi at
St. Louis, said Bob Anderson, a spokesman for the Army Corps in
Vicksburg, Mississippi.
The
federal Missouri River water-management plan can worsen the
Mississippi’s situation as a result, Anderson said. The
organization is “following the manual,” he said. The letter-
writing lawmakers argue against that, saying their reading of law
provides for more flexibility.
To
mitigate its reduction of Missouri River flow, which started Nov. 23,
the Corps started releasing water from Minnesota and Iowa on the
upper Mississippi on Nov. 20. Still, the Mississippi may reach record
lows, a disruption of traffic that may be unavoidable, he said.
“It’s
not so much river management now as it is the extended drought,” he
said. “We have nothing to work with. It’s gotten to the point
where it’s going to become a problem with navigation.”
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