Posted on 08/06/2012 10:47:43 PM PDT by Aquamarine
If the worlds largest navigable river system goes dry, the economic consequences will be felt around the world.
What is the single greatest reason America is so wealthy? According to the analysts at Stratfor, it is because of a river.
They have to be joking, right?
What about Americas vast gold resources? What about its mountains of coal? America is the worlds third-largest oil producersurely that is why. Then there is Americas temperate climate and fertile soils that traditionally make it the worlds breadbasket. And dont forget Americas human capital, Yankee ingenuity, and Protestant work ethic. Surely these factors are cumulatively more important than a river.
Not according to one of Americas premier think tanks. Many countries have large natural resources and hospitable climates, but dont even come close to having Americas wealth. What sets America apart from the rest of the world is the Mississippi River basin. It is what makes exploiting Americas resources economically possible.
But now, due to the worst drought since the 1950s, the Mississippi may be about to go dry.
In Memphis and Vicksburg, the shrinking river is obvious: slower river, exposed river banks, and more sandbars. The water is down more than 13 and 20 feet in each city respectively. The Mississippi on average is about 13 feet below normaland a whopping 55 feet below where it was at this time last year. On some stretches, the water level is perilously low. On July 17 it was reported that a 100-mile stretch of the Platte River in Omaha, Nebraska, had dried up.
In fact, water levels are now so low that barge operators are no longer able to operate at full capacity and have to shed both weight and number of towed barges.
For each one-inch loss of water, the standard barge must unload 17 tons of cargothat is a loss of 204 tons, per barge, for every one-foot loss. A typical tow on the upper Mississippi river may have 15 barges. A one-foot loss of water translates into a loss of 3,000 tons of capacity. Tows on the lower Mississippi River may have up to 45 barges, resulting in a loss of capacity of over 9,000 tons. Tom Allegretti, president of the American Waterways Operators, reports that it would take 130 semitrucks or 570 rail cars to haul the freight unloaded by one large barge grouping under those conditions.
Almost 600 rail cars just to make up for the loss of one string of barges. There are thousands and thousands of barge strings that ply the Mississippi each year. The shutdown of the Mississippi would be an absolute catastrophe!
Already, the cost to ship bulk goods is rising. As the weight that can be put on barges shrinks, the cost per unit weight is rising. And that translates into higher costs on the consumers end. Products that are already only marginally profitable may not be economic at these higher transport costs.
The last time the Mississippi shut down due to low water was in 1988. Then just a small section of the river became unnavigablebut it cost the shipping industry $1 billion.
If the Mississippi shut down today, sources quoted by nbc estimate that the direct costs to the economy would be a massive $300 million per daya cost that would skyrocket exponentially if the river did not reopen after more than a few days!
We are still a few feet of water away from that, but the summer isnt over either.
1988 is the only time in recent memory that can compare with this summer, says Lynn Muench, senior vice president of American Waterways Operators. For the last two or three weeks, the phrase I keep hearing is, Close to 1988. Worse than 1988. Same as 1988, she says. Theres a real possibility that itll be worse this year.
Making matters worse for barge traffic, last years record flood stirred up debris and changed the location of underwater obstructions. The Army Corps of Engineers is working like crazy to dredge shallow areas and mark dangers.
But still, the number of barges going aground is rising. Shipping lanes are narrowing. And traffic is slowing. On Wednesday, a barge grounded in Minnesota. It took 24 hours to clear it, and another day to dredge the channel before other barge-trains could pass. The same day, another barge got stuck in La Crosse, Wisconsin. It took about a day to get traffic moving there again. cbs News says barge traffic is getting hung up all up and down the Mississippi, even in areas that normally dont have any problem.
Americas Mississippi River system is an absolute jewel that America cannot afford to loseno matter how short the duration.
The Mississippi River, in conjunction with Missouri, Red, Arkansas and Ohio rivers, comprises the largest interconnected network of navigable rivers in the world. Stratfor calls the Greater Mississippi river network the circulatory system of the Midwest. It is what opens up one third of America to the world. Even without the addition of canals, it is possible for ships from anywhere in the world to reach nearly any part of the Midwest. With the addition of canals, goods can now be transported from the Great Lakes in the north to New Orleans in the south.
And this fantastic water highway just happens to sit astride the most fertile crop-growing region in the world.
It is hard to overstate the economic implications of this overlap. The geography of most nations requires their governments to devote scarce resources to lay endless rail and road to build the transport capacity that was gifted to America at no expense. And water transport costs a fraction of moving goods by road and rail.
The Mississippi River network virtually guaranteed that America would be rich.
But the Mississippi blessing may now be turning into a curse. Everybody is aware that America is in the midst of an epic drought. Contingency plans are being made for reduced corn, soybean and wheat crops. America has experienced droughts before. Markets are prepared for this reality, although they may be underestimating the global consequences of the drought.
America is now critically reliant upon the uninterrupted functioning of this vast intercontinental transport network. The drying up of the Mississippieven for as short a period as a weekwould be a huge, unexpected blow to this nation, never mind the global economy. And it is one that America and the world can ill afford at this time.
What is Obama gonna do to save us?
Never let a crisis go to waste.
In the interest of warning as many people as possible, the author has made it available on Amazon as a Kindle download for $0.99.
The book is well written, well documented, and will keep you up at night. It's something most Americans prefer not to think about.
(6) -8.00 ft on 11/16/1993
With a slight reprieve predicted, let's hope it doesn't match the record:
(1) -10.70 ft on 07/10/1988
I remember that year very well, just from local conditions here in Chitown. The grass was silver in June, and the golf course that summer was like hard clay. This was before global warming, I guess, because nobody mentioned it.
For such a time as this . . . . http://patburt.com/
We’re in the 17th straight year of a drought here in central GA. I know it will end someday, but I would still like to be around to see it...
Al Gore and friends were sitting around laughing about the gullibility of the masses of Americans. They pondered on just how they could capitalize on this mass ignorance and settled on Global Warming. Primitive people in the throes of a crisis of no rain, extreme heat (summer) would certainly be receptive to a savior. They are all flim flam specialists and they are using a predictable increase in heat to scare the idiots into compliance. What better way to become King?
“(1) -10.70 ft on 07/10/1988”
During that summer a Hydrologist was interviewed on radio and he said it would take a decade for the watershed in Minnesota to recover....before the end of the summer of 1989, the watershed had not only recovered but was over flowing.
The Earth is self-regulating. Now someone needs to teach the elites that they cannot make it over again in their image.
The Trumpet is published by the Philadelphia Church of God which is an abusive cult headed by an alcoholic named Gerald Flurry.
They have to be joking, right?
Of course!! Everybody knows the answer is "government."
Volga River (Russia) and the Yangtze (China)? C'mon! Not saying naviagable rivers are not important, but let's not go overboard!
“Oh, the article mentions ships.
You will never see a sea going ship on the Mississippi.
Only barges travel the river, transporting bulk materials.”
http://www.riverlorian.com/mississippiriver.htm
“Once reaching Baton Rouge, Louisiana there are ocean going ships that come into the Mississippi River from the Gulf Mexico. The lower 234 miles of the river is a deep-water port. “
“Once reaching Baton Rouge, Louisiana there are ocean going ships that come into the Mississippi River”
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Yes, I know that many ships enter the mouth, but they do not traverse the river north of Louisiana.
At least in my fifty years there, I never saw a “ship”.
Deep draft vessels cannot get north of N. Baton Rouge - the Old MS River bridge is too low, courtesy of H. P. Long.
LLS
“Here’s the River gauge at Memphis. It is low, and so far has matched the sixth lowest on record:
(6) -8.00 ft on 11/16/1993 “
This surprises me as August 1993 was the year the Missouri river had its “500 year” flood.
All that rain runs off into the Tennessee River that empties into the Ohio at Paducaa that empties into the Mississippi at Cairo. The water is coming from the TVA lakes that are all at peak pool levels
BTW Last October we spent a month on the Great River Road. It is a marked series of roads that run from the head at Lake Itaska Minnesota to the mouth at Venice Louisiana following the Mississippi through the very heart of America. It is a great trip and America at it's very best. We saw all the tows and the myriad of port facilities that ship or receive the vast production of America. It is truly amazing in scope
Actually, sea going ships come up the river as far a Baton Rouge and the port of New Orleans carries very high tonnage
The Hurt P Long bridge is plenty high enough to permit passage of ocean going traffic. How do you think all those naval vessels built at Avondale get out?
“Deep draft vessels cannot get north of N. Baton Rouge”
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Yes, the river is only for riverboats, not ships.
IIRC, many years ago there was the desire to bring a US navy ship up the river and dock it in Memphis as a museum.
After all, Millington, a suburb of Memphis is home to maybe the largest INLAND US navy base. It is, however, a naval air base, not at all related to the seas.
I do, however, remember as a child, seeing hordes of sailors
in there bright whites cruising the streets of downtown Memphis.
I think the problem with bringing a ship up the river was that it had to be done during spring floods, but at that time, they would not be able to clear the bridges.
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