NAVIGATION AND ECOSYSTEM SUSTAINABILITY PROGRAM (NESP)    

ST. PAUL DISTRICT - ROCK ISLAND DISTRICT - ST. LOUIS DISTRICT

NESP Events

A groundbreaking ceremony was held April 12, 2023 for the Lock and Dam 14 Mooring Cell project on the Mississippi River.
The USACE Rock Island District hosted and Industry Day, May 17, 2023, to inform potential contractors about the Lock and Dam 22 Fish Passage Project near Hannibal, Missouri.
USACE Rock Island District Commander, Col. Jesse Curry, holds a paddlefish during a fish tagging event at Lock and Dam 22 in Hannibal, Missouri.
Mitch Landrieu, senior advisor to the President and Infrastructure Coordinator, speaks during a groundbreaking ceremony held near Hannibal, Missouri, for the Lock and Dam 22 Fish Passage Project.
A groundbreaking ceremony was held May 18, 2023, for the new 1,200-foot Lock Project at Lock and Dam 25 near Winfield, Missouri.
A groundbreaking ceremony was held at Lock and Dam 22 in Hannibal, Missouri, on May 18, 2023 to commemorate the start of the Fish Passage Project.

         NAVIGATION IMPROVEMENTS     

The 85+ year-old navigation system continues to experience some of the longest lockage delays in the country due to single, undersized 600’ lock chambers (most tows are 1,200 feet in length), and downtime for repair of aged gates and machinery. The existing locks and dams were constructed in the 1930s and 1940s with 600-foot locks. Current lock delays average 4-5 hours. Lack of funding for lock and dam rehabilitation and major maintenance activities in recent years has increased the risk of component failures and lock closures.

The June 2012 Institute for Water Resources report on U.S. Port and Inland Waterway Modernization found that the Upper Mississippi River - Illinois Waterway (UMR-IWW) navigation system has adequate capacity through 2020, but will require maintenance of existing capacity. Although the UMR-IWW tonnage has decreased over the last decade, this trend is expected to reverse due to increased demand for grain exports and enlargement of the Panama Canal. A long-term strategy is essential for maintaining reliable and cost-effective inland navigation. Inland navigation is estimated to save $23.74 per ton compared to overland transportation (Planning Center for Expertise for Inland Navigation, January 31, 2012). The estimated savings for the Upper Mississippi River and Illinois Waterway based on 2010 tonnage values would be $1.44 billion and $0.86 billion, respectively.

Navigation Projects