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18809


Date: September 30, 2023 at 14:53:40
From: Captainj, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Mississippi River Near Historic Lows Putting Grain Exports at Risk

URL: Link


A key stretch of the lower Mississippi River dropped
this week to within inches of its lowest-ever level and
is expected to remain near historic lows just as the
busiest U.S. grain export season gets underway,
according to the National Weather Service.

Low water has slowed hauling of export-bound corn and
soybean barges over recent weeks as shippers lightened
loads to prevent vessels from running aground and
reduced the number of barges they haul at one time to
navigate a narrower shipping channel.

The water woes come at the worst possible time for U.S.
farmers as newly harvested corn and soybeans are
beginning to flood the market and as stiff market
competition from Brazil has already eroded once-
dominant U.S. exports.

Portions of the river have been closed 22 times since
Sept. 1 for dredging or to remove barges that have run
aground, and at least 36 groundings have been reported,
the U.S. Coast Guard said.

The Mississippi River dropped to a reading of -10.62
feet on the Memphis, Tennessee, gauge on Thursday, just
above its all-time low of -10.81 feet on October 21
last year, according to NWS data.

The river is expected to remain below the -10 foot mark
into at least mid-October, according to the latest
forecast, creating a choke point between heavy
production areas in the Midwest and Gulf Coast
terminals, where around 60% of U.S. grain exports exit
the country.

“October’s not normally a robust precipitation month,
and if we’re here already … it’s a real cause for
concern,” said Mike Steenhoek, executive director of
the Soy Transportation Coalition.

Low water has also driven freight costs to the highest
levels since last year’s historic river woes and made
U.S. grain much less competitive in the global
marketplace. BG/US


Responses:
[18813] [18810] [18812]


18813


Date: October 02, 2023 at 19:57:25
From: eaamon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Mississippi River Near Historic Lows Putting Grain Exports at Risk


they have decided to barge in several thousand gallons of fresh water to the local distributor.


Responses:
None


18810


Date: October 01, 2023 at 10:28:42
From: eaamon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Mississippi River Near Historic Lows Putting Grain Exports at Risk


the worst part of it is the salt inflows into the drinking water intakes
during high tide.


Responses:
[18812]


18812


Date: October 01, 2023 at 19:15:55
From: Captainj, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Mississippi River Near Historic Lows Putting Grain Exports at Risk


For NOLA and those closer to the Gulf, yes! Also, as
most people do not realize, a lot of the Rice and crops
depend on freshwater pumped and the wells are starting
to get saltwater intrusion which stunts and then kills
the crops.


Responses:
None


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