Coal barges are stuck on the riverbank after the water level on the Mississippi river dropped to near historical lows in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on Oct. 18. For the second straight year this largest North American river has sunk to record low levels amid ongoing drought, leaving the majestic Mississippi as a mere shadow of its former self.From the Great Lakes in the north to Louisiana in the south, plants are taking over newly exposed river banks. Salt water has replaced fresh water near the Gulf of Mexico. And farmers dependent on the river to ship their products have watched with frustration as the flow of river traffic has seized up. The volume of grain shipped on the Mississippi has dropped by half from the average of the past three years, according to the US Department of Agriculture. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images) Photo Credit: ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS
Mark GongloffBloomberg Opinion It’s hard to think of the vast and powerful Mississippi River as anything other than mighty. But decades of misuse and a…