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Immediate Release

Corps monitors low water on the Upper Mississippi River, navigation continues

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District, continues to closely monitor water levels on the Upper Mississippi River as drought conditions continue across Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. The low water is not affecting shipping conditions on the river and navigation continues.

“Low flow is exactly the conditions for which the locks were built,” said Dan Fasching, St. Paul District water manager for the Upper Mississippi River. “The locks, combined with dredging efforts, are used to maintain navigable depths in the main channel”

The lowest flow recorded at Lock and Dam 2, in Hastings, Minnesota, was in 1976, when the flow fell to only 500 cubic feet per second, or cfs, and navigation continued. The current flow at Lock and Dam 2 is around 3,000 cfs.

Water levels along the Mississippi River can be monitored at https://water.usace.army.mil/.

For more information on how the lock and dam system work to maintain the 9-foot navigation channel, see: https://www.mvp.usace.army.mil/Missions/Navigation/Locks-Dams/.

The St. Paul District navigation program provides a safe, reliable, cost-effective and environmentally sustainable waterborne transportation system on the Upper Mississippi River for the movement of commercial goods and for national security needs. To do this, the district maintains a 9-foot navigation channel and 13 locks and dams from Minneapolis to Guttenberg, Iowa. Keeping this system open is vital to the nation's economy.

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