IC 8431 Transportation Of Mineral Commodities On The Inland Waterways Of The South-Central States

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Frank B. Fulkerson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
93
File Size:
36412 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

Barge traffic on the Nation's inland waterways over the past 15 years has been increasing at a rate much faster than intercity freight traffic by all modes, largely due to the growing consumption of mineral commodities, development of more powerful towboats and large and more specialized barges, improvements to loading and unloading facilities, and competition among bargelines for contract shipment of bulk commodities. The Bureau of Mines, in a study to determine barge traffic projections for inland waterways in the South-Central States to the year 1980, gathered data on origin-destination patterns by commodity, quantity moved, equipment used, and rates charged; the trend of each of these factors over time; and the extent of competition between water trans-port and other means of transportation. The Mississippi River and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, which together carryover half the Nation's barge traffic, are major carriers of coal, crude petroleum, steel, marine shells, sulfur, salt, cement, and alumina. Greater quantities of these products will be transported by barge; however, oil pipe-lines and unit trains for coal are expected to limit increased barge traffic of these two commodities. Increasing quantities of fertilizer materials will be transported upstream. Although congestion at certain locks is a current problem, the Mississippi River below St. Louis and other open-river stretches have the capacity to handle the increasing number of barges for the foreseeable future.
Citation

APA: Frank B. Fulkerson  (1969)  IC 8431 Transportation Of Mineral Commodities On The Inland Waterways Of The South-Central States

MLA: Frank B. Fulkerson IC 8431 Transportation Of Mineral Commodities On The Inland Waterways Of The South-Central States. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1969.

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