
-
Five journalists among 20 killed in Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital: civil defence
-
Telegram's Durov blasts French probe one year after arrest
-
African players in Europe: Another historic goal for Ndiaye
-
Amorim warns Mainoo he must fight for his Manchester United place
-
Portugal counts the cost of its biggest ever forest fire
-
Russia to hold espionage hearing against French researcher
-
Rooney forecasts 'massive future' for Arsenal teen sensation Dowman
-
Four journalists among 15 killed in Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital: civil defence
-
India cricket ends $43.6 mn sponsorship after online gambling ban: report
-
France's sole Paris Olympics athletics medallist Samba-Mayela to miss worlds
-
Springboks recall Jasper Wiese, but brother Cobus misses out
-
Asian markets rally on US rate cut hopes
-
Zanele Muholi, S.African photographer reclaiming identity
-
'Restoring dignity': Kenya slum exchange offers water for plastic
-
Sabalenka, Djokovic into US Open round two as fuming Medvedev exits
-
Human ancestor Lucy gets first European showing in Prague
-
China Evergrande Group delisted from Hong Kong stock exchange
-
A healer and a fighter: The double life of UFC star Shi Ming
-
US Open chaos as Bonzi ousts raging Medvedev
-
Bleak future for Rohingya, as Bangladesh seeks to tackle crisis
-
Cambodia MPs pass law allowing stripping of citizenship
-
What to look for at the Venice Film Festival
-
Venice welcomes Julia Roberts, George Clooney to film festival
-
Djokovic voices physical concerns after US Open win
-
Olympic Council of Asia says Saudi Winter Games 'on schedule'
-
Asian markets rise on US rate cut hopes
-
Vietnam evacuates tens of thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
-
Sabalenka into US Open second round, Djokovic off the mark
-
Australian mushroom meal survivor says 'half alive' after wife's killing
-
SpaceX calls off Starship megarocket launch in latest setback
-
Djokovic shrugs off blisters to advance at US Open
-
Israeli strikes in Yemen's capital kill six, Huthis say
-
UN Security Council to vote on embattled Lebanon peacekeepers
-
Egyptian farmers behind world's perfumes face climate fight alone
-
'Life-long dream': Oasis kicks off North American tour in Toronto
-
Australia's mushroom murderer faces victims' family in court
-
Abasca Resources Releases Assays Confirming Multiple Intersections from its Thor Graphite Zone and Announces Resumption of In-Fill Drilling at its Loki Flake Graphite Deposit
-
Metallic Minerals Announces Additional $2 Million in Private Placement Financings
-
Rio Grande Resources Announces Strategic Engagement with Existing Agency to Broaden Market Awareness and Expands Corporate Communications Team
-
IRS Debt Is Cutting Into Barbers' Earnings - Clear Start Tax Warns 1099 Shop Owners and Booth Renters About Hidden Tax Liabilities
-
RMTG Subsidiary Cellgenic to Host Soft Opening of Advanced Cell Therapy Manufacturing Lab in Cancun During September ISSCA Global Summit
-
SOBRsafe to Present at the 2025 Gateway Conference on September 3rd
-
XCF Global to Ring the Nasdaq Opening Bell Today
-
Alset AI Announces Early Warrant Exercise Incentive Program to Strengthen Balance Sheet for Growth
-
SMX and Bio-Packaging Launch Molecularly Traceable Sustainable Packaging for Singapore's Circular Economy
-
Major Hyperscaler Expands AI Processor Production Capacity with Additional Aehr Test Package-Level Test and Burn-in Systems
-
Capstone adds $11 Million in Revenue with Carolina Stone Acquisition - Drives Immediate Accretion and Southeast Expansion
-
Green Rain Energy Holdings (OTC:$GREH) to Sign Landmark Turnkey EPC Contract with Wallace Energy to Accelerate Solar Farm and Nationwide EV Charging Rollout
-
Arrive AI Embraces Cryptocurrency for Everything
-
HyProMag USA Commences Stockpiling of Feedstock

Drought-hit farmers in US heartland hope Mississippi 'comes back'
Jonathan Driver, an Arkansas farmer with blackened hands and a thick southern drawl, doesn't have a minute to spare.
He's been working 16 or 17 hours a day to finish harvesting his crops and -- an added stress this year -- to find someplace to store tons of excess soybeans.
"Getting it out of that field is very crucial," Driver said as he stepped out of his white pick-up truck.
But for a second straight year, dangerously low water levels in the Mississippi River have drastically curtailed river transport, and that means added costs and complications for the farmers of the American heartland.
Driver, who sports a light beard and a gray baseball cap, also grows rice, which he stores in three squat corrugated-steel silos.
But the soybean harvest isn't done, and the barges that in normal years would take his product downriver are in terribly short supply, slowing grain shipments to the Gulf of Mexico and points beyond, eventually to feed livestock around the world.
So Driver plans to sell his rice as quickly as possible -- even if it's not for "the price I want" -- to make room for soybeans.
The need is pressing. For in his soybean fields, little yellow pods are already popping open and hitting the ground -- crops that will be lost.
It's a race against the clock.
- Low world prices -
"Every day you see pods popping, you're losing $3,000 a day," Driver said, before glumly adding, "I don't have $3,000 left to lose."
In the barn behind him, two men are busy repairing a massive combine harvester.
Driver's father was in the fields operating another harvester, and his wife was out working as well.
With storage in desperately short supply, the Drivers are employing grain bags -- enormous, long, tube-shaped plastic bags that, in proper conditions, can keep cereals good for some time, hopefully until traffic picks up again on the Mississippi.
"There is a possible scenario that you got to go into long-term storage" using the bags, Driver said, even "into sometime next year."
But this alternative storage method is a risky one, and not just because of possible bad weather.
After record global harvests this year, soybean and corn prices are depressed, and the buildup of grain reserves on US farms due to the problems on the Mississippi could keep prices low for some time.
- 'Going to come back up' -
There are alternatives to river transport -- mainly rail and truck -- but they cost more and emit more carbon dioxide.
Plus, local farmers feel a real attachment to the Mississippi.
Jimmy Moody works on riverfront land inherited from his grandfather in Tennessee, across the river from Driver's land in northern Arkansas.
For as long as he remembers, he said, grain "all gets shipped on a river to the Gulf. You know, if we can't unload on the river, then we've got to go east."
"So we're very dependent on the river," he adds.
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.
Like Driver, Moody is storing excess soybeans in the huge sausage-shaped bags, despite the inherent risks. He is hoping to get better prices for his crops once the Mississippi is again easily navigable.
"I don't have any worry about it," he said. "You know, the river's going to come back up."
At 71, Moody has seen hard times come and go.
"We'll still be shipping grain to the Gulf long after I'm gone," he said.
O.Johnson--AMWN