JEFFERSON CITY, MO (KFVS) -
Gov. Jay Nixon is asking the Army Corps of Engineers to continue providing water flow to the Mississippi River.
In a letter sent to the Assistant Secretary of the Army, Jo-Ellen Darcy, the governor urged the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to continue providing water flow from the Missouri River to the Mississippi River.
According to the governor's office, the Corps' current plans would stop the release of water from the Missouri River's upstream reservoirs beginning December 1. The governor says this would negatively impact navigation the Mississippi River.
According to a spokesman for the governor, under normal conditions,
water from the Missouri River accounts for about 60 percent of the flow
in the Mississippi River. However, because of this year's significant
drought, the Mississippi River has received as much as 78 percent of its
water from the Missouri River.
Even with this support from the
Missouri River, the spokesman says the low water levels in the
Mississippi have forced barge operators to carry lighter loads. He says
this has decreased productivity and potentially reducing exports.
Without additional and continued support, America's barge and export
operations are at risk.
"The 2012 drought has caused a significant impact on water levels on the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. With the continuing and projected lack of adequate precipitation, additional barge traffic restrictions on – or even closure of – the Mississippi River channel become imminent possibilities. I urge the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to avert potential economic disaster on this vital avenue American farmers use to get their goods into the world market," Gov. Nixon said in his letter.
Gov. Nixon noted in his letter that the Corps has the authority to provide the additional water, and cited previous occasions in which the Corps has deviated from its established plan in order to prevent adverse impacts.
Copyright 2012 KFVS. All rights reserved.