Farm Futures
   Search Site:  Search Site Tuesday, May 21, 2013 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
This Business of FarmingThis Business of Farming   
A critical, oft-times irreverent look at cutting edge issues that impact U.S. farmers.
 
  • Post to Your Wall.
 
 

Private Funds Needed to Fix Locks and Dams

Posted on May 16, 2013

When the U.S. Senate passed the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA), it was a major step toward fixing the gnawing infrastructure problems our country faces now and in to the future. The most glaring may be on our waterways. Without maintenance of our eroding locks and dams, the risk of catastrophic failure grows. Fifty-seven percent (57%) of the locks and dams on the nation’s inland waterways system have exceeded their economic design life expectancy.

WRDA would sanction more than 20 new U.S. Army Corps of Engineers projects, some aimed at making ports more accessible in line with 2015 completion of a widened Panama Canal. It would ensure that more money in the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund, financed by user fees, actually goes to harbor improvements. It takes steps to expedite the environmental review process and streamline the process for Corps projects and reduce project completion times. It would free up money and increase the capacity of the Inland Waterways Trust Fund (IWTF) by taking the Olmsted Lock and Dam project out of the trust fund account.

What happens if a lock shuts down? You divert to another mode, which is costly, since a typical 15-barge tow equals 216 rail cars or 1,050 trucks. Consider the LaGrange lock and dam, located on the Illinois River. "This is the poster child for problem locks and dams," says Ken Erickson, senior partner at Informa Economics. If the LaGrange lock would be shut down for 90 days during peak soy harvest movement, 341 barge loads would need to be diverted. That's 21,000 truckloads, or 5,200 railcar loads.

"Now you'd get a shock in terms of pricing grain," Erickson continues. "When you interrupt that movement between Chicago and the Gulf, the world falls apart."

According to the Corps' Project Completion Schedule, the LaGrange 1,200-foot lock addition is not scheduled until 2065. The Corps has a backlog of $60 billion in infrastructure projects.

So much to do, so little money to do it with. That's why a public-private partnership may now be the best way to fix river problems.

Getting need maintenance finished now will buy down risk. Every Army Corps project is ready to go; the holdup is money. A public-private partnership would look at volume and key users of river transport for potential funding sources. This could be a bonding effort, tax effort, or fee structure through a waterway authority.

Private interests can provide upfront cash through a bond, providing money to make fixes now. Meanwhile the government can add public monies supplemental to private funding. Then you at least alleviate the chance of catastrophic failure. Such an approach would likely need congressional support and some kind of method to assess and collect fees.

In March the Senate introduced a bipartisan bill, the Water Infrastructure Now Public-Private Partnership Act, to expedite water infrastructure projects, including locks and dams along the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. The act would create a pilot program to see if a public-private agreement would work. The five-year pilot would identify up to 15 previously unauthorized projects, chosen by a disinterested third party.

Now that bill has been added as an amendment to WRDA.

Another public-private effort is called the Capitol Development Plan, now represented as “WAVE-4: Waterways are Vital for the Economy, Energy, Efficiency, and Environment.” Introduced by Congressman Ed Whitfield (Kentucky), it represents the collaborative efforts of Inland Waterway Users Board members, Corps  officials, agriculture and other stakeholders to address the efficiency of the Corps project delivery system and the need for a more stable funding stream.

The Plan prioritizes navigation projects across entire Inland Navigation System; improves the Corps’ project management and processes to deliver projects on time and on budget; preserves 50% industry/ 50% Federal cost-sharing formula for new lock construction and major rehabilitation lock projects over $100 million; provides that dam construction and smaller lock rehabilitation projects be 100% Federally funded; imposes a cost-share cap on new lock construction projects; and imposes a 30-45% increase (between 6 and 9 cents/gallon) in the existing fuel tax of 20 cents/gallon.

'Magic fairy dust'

Through the ages, efficient transportation has proven to be the unsung hero of a country's export power and global standing. "Most people think it is magic fairy dust the way we move shipments around the world," says Erickson. "But if you've got someone who wants what is being produced here, and you don't have an effective, efficient transportation system that allows those two parties to meet, you have no value for that supply."

Consider also the economic impact of moving a bushel of American grain to another spot on the planet. The industry that makes up the 'second handlers' of grain –  such as feeders and processors – account for 1.5 million jobs, more than $352 billion in U.S. output, and more than $74 billion in value added for the U.S. economy.

A few years ago a major Ag company came out with an ambitious goal to double grain production by 2030. The goal itself is ambitious, but it's doable. However, getting that added production from point A to point B is another question. To accommodate all those extra bushels we will put more trucks on roads, more barges through locks and dams, and more containers on railcars and inside ocean-going ships.

Striving for better transportation to market should be as high a priority for you as striving for higher yields. Without the former, the latter is just wasted effort.

Add a Comment

Recent Posts
Back to Top
Is Farmland in a Bubble – and Does it Matter?
Posted on January 08, 2013
With expectations high, potential buyers say they will look to buy anyway
Category: Natural resources
Mississippi's Battle to Keep Nutrients in Place
Posted on May 31, 2012
Recycling irrigation water is one of many strategies in Delta Farming conservation strategies
Category: Natural resources
South America’s No-till Pioneer
Posted on April 18, 2012
Brazil’s no-till revolution started with one man who dared to think in unconventional ways
Category: Natural resources
No-till: An Answer for Climate Change?
Posted on April 16, 2012
No-till can mitigate extreme weather and keep soil in place
Category: Natural resources
Tour Proves Why Conservation is Still Cool
Posted on August 09, 2011
No-tillers, innovators gather to learn latest precision, soil-saving techniques
Category: Natural resources
Illinois Farmland Tops $11,000 Per Acre
Posted on June 27, 2011
Red hot land market shows no signs of letting up
Category: Natural resources
Is This the Moon? No, it’s Missouri Farmland
Posted on June 15, 2011
Waters recede near breached levee, revealing crop fields that look more like the Badlands of South Dakota than productive acreage
Category: Natural resources
The Trouble with CSP
Posted on April 18, 2011
Why conservation programs aren't set up to do what farmers – and consumers - want
Category: Natural resources
Farmland: Still Red Hot
Posted on February 25, 2011
Recent Central Illinois sales average around $8,000 per acre
Category: Natural resources
Are We Running Out of Phosphorus?
Posted on February 15, 2011
Maybe not, but the countries that own reserves may scare you
Category: Natural resources
Are We Running Out of Phosphorus?
Posted on November 23, 2010
Fertilizer reserves may be okay, but the countries that own them may scare you
Category: Natural resources
Controlled Drainage: Next Big Thing for Ag?
Posted on October 29, 2010
Subsurface systems provide better water table management and less nitrate runoff
Category: Natural resources
Fifty Years of Service to Agriculture
Posted on September 21, 2010
Agronomist devotes life to improving water efficiency in Nebraska crop production
Category: Natural resources
Why Conservation is Cool (Again)
Posted on August 09, 2010
New generation of 'never-till' farmers are building organic matter – and profits
Category: Natural resources
Dialogue with a Farmer, Part One
Posted on May 27, 2010
Nebraska grower makes a case for more sustainable agriculture
Category: Natural resources
Global Ag Leaders Talk Climate Change
Posted on January 22, 2010
They're looking at ways to make ag more climate friendly, yet feed more people
Category: Natural resources
Blog

Category

Archives

About The Writer
This Business of Farming

Mike Wilson has spent the last 25 years as a writer, photographer and editor for various U.S. agricultural magazines. He grew up on a grain and livestock farm in Ogle County, Ill., and earned a bachelor's degree in agricultural journalism from the University of Illinois in 1981.

He served as editor of Prairie Farmer magazine from 1990 to 2001. He has been executive editor of Farm Futures since 2004.