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US Midwest floodwaters falling, costs rising
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-06-30 09:20

ST. LOUIS - Levees on the cresting Mississippi River held on Sunday as the worst US Midwest flooding in 15 years began to ebb, but multibillion-dollar crop losses may boost world food prices for years.

In this file photo taken Monday, June 23, 2008, floodwater from the Mississippi River surrounds a small shed behind a house in Foley, Mo. Once the Mississippi River starts to recede this week from another great flood, the tiny river towns that dot its banks in Missouri and Illinois will once again face the question. [Agencies]

Water levels on the river receded for the second straight day as mostly clear weather gave saturated areas a chance to start draining. Forecasts for similar dry weather in coming days gave further encouragement.

The swollen river was expected to crest on Monday in St. Louis at 38.9 feet, 11 feet below the record set in 1993 and a level considered "manageable," said US Army Corps of Engineers St. Louis District spokesman Alan Dooley.

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"The crest in the areas up the Mississippi River in the district has passed," Dooley said. "The water is still up very high and it is up against levees."

There were no fresh levee breaks reported on Sunday. At least three dozen levees, berms and other flood barriers have been overtopped along the Mississippi in the last two weeks as the runoff from torrential rains this month pushed south along the main US inland waterway.

Several flood warnings remained in effect for communities in Missouri and Illinois, but officials said they expected the worst was over, with the focus now shifting to clean-up.

"We're just mentally and physically exhausted," said Winfield, Missouri, resident Carol Broseman, who fled her home for a shelter on Saturday after flood waters engulfed her neighborhood. "I've cried all I can cry."

Corn stalks begin to sprout up in a corn field near Cambridge, Iowa, June 27, 2008. Levees on the cresting Mississippi River held on Sunday as the worst U.S. Midwest flooding in 15 years began to ebb, but multibillion-dollar crop losses may boost world food prices for years. Picture taken June 27. [Agencies]

The National Weather Service on Sunday forecast windy but mostly dry weather in the western and central Midwest states for the next several days, which will help waters recede further. Many Iowa rivers, which saw record flooding two weeks ago, were back near or below flood stage on Sunday.

The Corps of Engineers at Rock Island, Illinois, reopened two locks on the Mississippi River but said four in the district remained closed with water still 3-5 feet (0.9-1.5 metres) above lock walls.

At one point 388 miles of the Mississippi River were closed to commercial traffic, from Clinton, Iowa, to the Jefferson Barracks Bridge, just south of St. Louis. The blockages have cost barge companies and other shippers millions of dollars.

Cost, relief requests rising

The Midwest storms and torrential rains have killed at least 24 people since late May. More than 38,000 people have been driven from their homes, mostly in Iowa where 83 of 99 counties have been declared disaster areas.

Fears that as many as 5 million acres of corn and soybeans have been lost to flooding in the world's largest grain and food exporter pushed corn and livestock prices to record highs in the last week.

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