Declining Mississippi River levels are causing twofold water woes

The Mississippi River is now facing its third year of declining water levels, impacting the transportation of ag goods.

Our good friend of Market Day Report, Mike Steenhoek says that those impacts are being felt in two major ways.

“Number one is the ability to put a lot of tonnage in individual barges, and then number two, the ability to attach multiple barges all together to form one single unit, and then you have the towboat pushing it from the back. And when you have low water conditions, it has an impact on channel depth and on channel width. And so you no longer can put as much tonnage per barge, because you’re concerned about scraping the bottom [or] even having a grounding. And then when you have less water, the shipping channel becomes more narrow, so you don’t have the luxury of attaching all these barges together to form one single unit,” he explains.

This comes as combines roll in fields across the country.

55% of U.S. soybeans are exported via the lower Mississippi and Steenhoek says that affordable transportation costs give U.S. soy a competitive global edge.

“We’re able to do it more efficiently than they are, because one of the reasons being is we’ve got this very efficient, maritime highway called the Mississippi River that can efficiently move product long distances to our export regions like the Mississippi Gulf,” he notes. “Well, when all of a sudden that efficiency is diminished due to low water levels, then all of a sudden that overall competitive advantage erodes as well.”

He went on to say that farmers have very few, if any, cost-efficient alternatives.

Related Stories
Corn and sorghum exports remain strong; soybean demand lags.
Secretary Rollins is signaling a possible reopening of the southern border to Mexican feeder cattle as officials work to manage the threat of the New World Screwworm.
Lower shipping costs alone will not restore export competitiveness.
Rising fuel costs will soon increase grain transportation expenses.
The USDA’s upcoming reports will drop on Tuesday afternoon, giving the trade real results on acreage shifts, drought concerns, and ongoing trade tensions, adding uncertainty for U.S. farmers.
South Texas farmers face worsening drought as Mexico falls short on water payments, leaving producers struggling for irrigation under the 1944 treaty.