Saturday, May 9, 2026

The Hidden Arteries - FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series - Post 6 — The INCO Reform — the governance instrument the system needs

The Hidden Arteries — FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series · Post 6
The Hidden Arteries  ·  FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series Post 6

The Hidden Arteries

The INCO Reform — Centralized Management vs. Project-by-Project Fragmentation

Three Projects in Twenty-Eight Years

The United States Army Corps of Engineers has completed approximately three major inland lock and dam modernization projects in the past 28 years. The Corps manages the inland waterway system that moves 500 million tons of freight annually — a system whose deferred maintenance backlog exceeds $100 billion, whose locks are operating decades past design life, and whose critical minerals and agricultural export functions are growing more strategically important by the year. The gap between the urgency of the problem and the pace of the solution is a governance problem, not a funding problem. The Inland Navigation Construction Organization proposal is the governance solution. It has not been enacted. This post explains why it should be.

Series Statement The Hidden Arteries is the third series in the FSA infrastructure trilogy. Posts 1 through 5 documented the lock constraint, the Mississippi backbone, the Ohio corridor, the Inola model, and the Great Lakes system. This post examines the governance problem that underlies the deferred maintenance backlog — the project-by-project appropriations structure that has produced three major completions in 28 years — and the INCO reform proposal that would replace it with a programmatic management model capable of delivering infrastructure at the pace the system requires.

The problem with the American inland waterway system's infrastructure investment is not primarily that Congress does not appropriate enough money. It is that the money Congress does appropriate — consistently less than what the system requires, but not negligible — is spent through a project management structure that virtually guarantees cost overruns, schedule delays, and a pace of completion that is incompatible with the urgency of the maintenance backlog.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers manages inland navigation infrastructure through its district system — nine districts, each responsible for a geographic portion of the inland waterway network, each with its own project management staff, its own contracting relationships, its own budget allocation, and its own reporting structure. A major lock modernization project — a new 1,200-foot lock chamber to replace a 600-foot chamber whose design life has expired — is managed by the district whose geographic territory contains the lock. The district competes for annual appropriations against every other district project and every other Corps mission (flood control, environmental restoration, harbor maintenance) in the annual appropriations cycle. If the project receives partial funding in one year, it must re-compete for its next year's funding increment against the same field of competing priorities. If the project is underfunded in a given year, the contractor holds, the mobilization costs accumulate, and the schedule extends — adding cost that future appropriations must absorb in addition to the original project budget.

"The problem is not primarily that Congress appropriates too little. It is that the money appropriated is spent through a project management structure that virtually guarantees cost overruns and schedule delays. The Olmsted Lock project cost $3 billion — three times its original estimate — and took 26 years. The governance structure produced that outcome, not the lock." The Hidden Arteries — Post 6
3
Major Projects Completed — 28 Years
1997–2025; the documented pace of the project-by-project system
$3B
Olmsted Lock Final Cost
Original estimate: ~$775M; 26-year construction; cost overrun is the governance failure
$739
Cost Per Hour Per Tow — Lock Delay
Direct delay cost; multiplied across hundreds of tows equals hundreds of millions annually
I. The Olmsted Case Study

How Project-by-Project Appropriations Turned a $775 Million Project into a $3 Billion One

The Olmsted Lock and Dam on the Ohio River — located near the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers at the downstream end of the Ohio system — is the definitive case study of what the project-by-project appropriations structure produces when applied to a major inland navigation project. The project was authorized in 1988 to replace two aging lock and dam structures with a single modern facility. The original cost estimate was approximately $775 million. Construction began in the late 1990s. The project was completed in 2018. Final cost: approximately $3.1 billion — four times the original estimate, over a construction timeline that stretched 26 years.

The cost growth and schedule extension were not primarily products of engineering surprises or contractor failures. They were products of the appropriations structure. The project received annual funding allocations that were consistently below what efficient construction progress would require. When funding was insufficient to maintain contractor mobilization — the equipment and labor force on site — the contractor demobilized, the project paused, and the costs of remobilization in subsequent years added to the total. Interest on borrowed project financing accumulated over the extended timeline. Inflation increased material and labor costs relative to the original estimate. Each year of delay added cost that the original estimate had not included because the original estimate assumed a construction timeline that continuous funding would have supported.

The Olmsted experience is not unique. The Chickamauga Lock on the Tennessee River — a modernization project that has been in the project queue for decades — has followed a similar pattern: authorized, partially funded, construction started, funding insufficient for efficient progress, timeline extended, cost growing. The Kentucky Lock on the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway has experienced similar dynamics. The pattern is systemic, not exceptional, because it is the product of a systemic governance structure rather than project-specific mismanagement.

II. The INCO Proposal

What a Programmatic Management Model Would Actually Change

The Inland Navigation Construction Organization proposal — developed in a white paper published jointly by the Waterways Council and HDR Engineering in early 2026 — recommends the establishment of a centralized programmatic management office within the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at the headquarters level. The INCO would function as a dedicated program office for inland navigation construction, with a single Inland Program Manager accountable for the overall project portfolio, unified planning across all districts, lessons-learned sharing between projects, and the ability to treat the inland waterway system as a national asset rather than a collection of competing district projects.

The INCO model draws explicitly from successful examples of programmatic management within the Corps itself and in comparable federal infrastructure programs. The Corps' Dam Safety Program — which manages the safety inspection and remediation of federal dams across all Corps districts — uses a programmatic approach that sets national priorities, allocates resources across districts based on risk and urgency, and maintains a headquarters-level program office that provides technical standards, contracting templates, and management accountability for the entire portfolio. The Dam Safety Program has delivered projects more efficiently and more consistently than the project-by-project inland navigation construction process. INCO would apply the same management model to inland navigation construction.

What INCO Does Not Require

The INCO proposal's most important political characteristic is what it does not require: no new major funding authorization, no new agency creation, no legislative restructuring of the Corps of Engineers. The Waterways Council and HDR white paper explicitly frames INCO as an administrative reform achievable within existing statutory authority — a reorganization of how the Corps manages its existing inland navigation construction mission, not a new program requiring new law. Congress could direct the Corps to establish INCO through language in the Water Resources Development Act of 2026 — the biennial authorization bill that is already in process as of 2026 — without the appropriations fight that a new spending program would require.

This political characteristic is the INCO proposal's greatest strength and its most underappreciated feature. The inland waterway investment debate is typically framed as a funding argument — advocates arguing for more money, appropriators citing competing priorities, the system getting incrementally less than it needs in each annual cycle. The INCO proposal reframes the argument: the question is not only how much money, but how the money that is appropriated is managed. A Congress that is unwilling to significantly increase inland navigation appropriations might be willing to require that the Corps manage what it does appropriate more effectively — and INCO is the instrument for that requirement.

"INCO reframes the inland waterway argument. The question is not only how much money, but how the money that is appropriated is managed. A Congress unwilling to increase appropriations might still require the Corps to manage what it does appropriate more effectively. That is a different fight — and a more winnable one." The Hidden Arteries — Post 6
III. The Critical Minerals Overlay

Adding Strategic Priority to the Project Selection Framework

The INCO white paper focuses primarily on the efficiency and delivery pace problem — the three completions in 28 years, the Olmsted pattern, the need for programmatic management. The series' contribution is to add a second dimension to the INCO framework: explicit integration of critical minerals logistics priorities into the project selection and resource allocation criteria that INCO would use to set its portfolio priorities.

Under the current project-by-project system, lock and dam projects are evaluated and prioritized based on benefit-cost analysis — primarily the economic value of the freight that the improved infrastructure would move more efficiently, measured in terms of transportation cost savings and reduced delay costs. This framework produces priorities that reflect the current commodity mix of the waterway system: projects that improve throughput on high-tonnage grain and coal corridors rank highly; projects on lower-volume corridors with emerging critical minerals freight rank lower, because their current freight value is smaller even if their strategic importance is larger.

An INCO framework with an explicit critical minerals resilience scoring element would correct this bias. A lock modernization project on the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System that enables the Inola aluminum smelter's long-term logistics viability — and creates the infrastructure platform for future rare earth and lithium processing facilities at MKARNS-connected locations — has a strategic value that pure benefit-cost analysis based on current freight does not capture. The INCO critical minerals overlay would require the program office to evaluate projects on a composite criterion that includes transportation cost savings, strategic resilience value for critical minerals supply chains, and national security benefits for Project Vault distribution and Battery Belt manufacturing logistics.

The WRDA 2026 Window

The Water Resources Development Act of 2026 — the biennial reauthorization bill that is in Congressional process as of this writing — is the most proximate legislative vehicle for INCO establishment. WRDA bills are among the most reliably bipartisan legislation in Congress: the inland waterway system serves agricultural, industrial, and energy constituents across both parties' coalition, and the infrastructure investment argument cuts across normal partisan divisions. A WRDA 2026 provision directing the Corps of Engineers to establish the Inland Navigation Construction Organization — with an explicit requirement to develop critical minerals resilience metrics for project prioritization — is achievable within the current legislative environment in a way that a separate standalone infrastructure bill might not be.

FSA Documentation — III: Current System vs. INCO Model Comparison
DimensionCurrent Project-by-Project SystemINCO Programmatic ModelExpected Improvement
Project management District-level; each project managed independently by geographic district Headquarters-level program office; single Inland Program Manager; unified portfolio management Consistent technical standards; lessons-learned sharing; reduced redundant overhead; accountability concentration
Funding continuity Annual appropriations competition; projects compete against each other and other Corps missions Programmatic budget allocation; multi-year project plans with defined funding profiles Reduced start-stop cycles; lower remobilization costs; schedule predictability for contractors
Project selection criteria Benefit-cost ratio based on current freight value; favors high-volume commodity corridors Composite criterion: transportation savings + resilience value + critical minerals strategic importance MKARNS and emerging critical minerals corridors receive priority weighting; strategic value captures forward-looking importance
Cost performance Olmsted pattern: $775M estimate → $3.1B final; 26-year construction Dam Safety Program pattern: consistent delivery within defined cost ranges; accountability for overruns Estimated 20–40% cost reduction on comparable projects through elimination of start-stop inflation and remobilization costs
Legislative vehicle Annual energy and water appropriations; WRDA biennial authorization WRDA 2026 direction to establish INCO within existing Corps authority; no new funding authorization required Achievable without new appropriations fight; bipartisan WRDA vehicle; implementation within 12–18 months of enactment
Pace of modernization ~3 major projects in 28 years (1997–2025) Modeled on Dam Safety Program delivery pace; target 2–3 major projects per 5-year cycle 3–4x improvement in delivery pace; 1,200-ft lock modernizations on priority corridors within current decade
FSA Wall The "20–40% cost reduction" and "3–4x improvement in delivery pace" estimates are analytical projections based on the comparison between current inland navigation construction performance and the Dam Safety Program's documented delivery performance. They are not from a published INCO cost-benefit analysis; the Waterways Council / HDR white paper does not provide specific quantified estimates of these improvements. The estimates are analytical inferences from the governance structure comparison, not audited projections.
IV. The Funding Structure

The Inland Waterways Trust Fund and the Cost-Sharing Framework

The Inland Waterways Trust Fund — funded by a per-gallon fuel tax on commercial vessels operating on designated inland waterways — provides half the construction cost of inland navigation projects, with the federal Treasury providing the other half. The Trust Fund was established in 1978 as a user-fee mechanism to ensure that the commercial waterway industry contributes to the capital cost of the infrastructure it uses. The current fuel tax rate is $0.29 per gallon — a rate that has not been increased since 2015 and has lost significant purchasing power to inflation over the intervening decade.

The Trust Fund balance and revenue have been a source of ongoing tension between the waterway industry and Congress. Industry advocates argue that the Trust Fund rate should be increased to provide more capital for navigation projects; fiscal conservatives argue that the existing rate already imposes a burden on an industry that competes with subsidized foreign waterway systems. The practical result is a Trust Fund that provides a meaningful but insufficient contribution to the project pipeline — enough to signal industry cost-sharing commitment, not enough to eliminate the appropriations gap.

The INCO reform does not require Trust Fund restructuring to be effective. But a Trust Fund rate increase — indexed to construction cost inflation so that the user fee maintains its real value over time — would provide a stable, predictable funding stream that complements the programmatic management that INCO provides. A programmatic management office that knows it will receive a defined annual Trust Fund contribution can plan its project pipeline and contractor relationships accordingly. A programmatic management office subject to annual Trust Fund revenue uncertainty cannot.

V. The Political Economy of Reform

Why This Has Not Happened — and What Has Changed

The INCO proposal is not new. Variants of the centralized programmatic management concept have been discussed in waterway infrastructure policy circles for years. The Waterways Council's early 2026 white paper represents the most developed and policy-ready formulation of the concept, but the underlying argument — that the Corps' district-based, project-by-project system is structurally incapable of delivering inland navigation projects efficiently — has been documented in Corps Inspector General reports, Government Accountability Office analyses, and Congressional Research Service studies for at least two decades.

It has not been enacted for the same reason that most administrative reform proposals in federal agencies are not enacted: the reform threatens the district-level autonomy and Congressional district-level earmarking that the existing system accommodates. A member of Congress from a state with a Corps district has a direct relationship with that district's project pipeline — the ability to advocate for specific projects that benefit constituents in specific geographic areas. A headquarters-level programmatic management office that sets national priorities based on composite criteria including strategic resilience value would reduce the district-by-district political influence over project selection that the current system preserves. Reform requires accepting that tradeoff.

What has changed as of 2026 is the strategic context. The Inola aluminum smelter's $4 billion investment and its explicit dependence on the MKARNS is the most powerful argument the waterway infrastructure reform community has had in decades: a documented, high-profile, nationally significant industrial investment whose long-term viability depends on waterway infrastructure that the current system is not maintaining or improving at an adequate pace. The Iron Loop series documented the merger as an act of infrastructure statecraft. The Inola project makes the MKARNS — and by extension the inland waterway system — an equivalent act of statecraft. That framing changes the political economy of the INCO argument from a transportation efficiency debate into a national competitiveness and critical minerals security debate.

FSA Framework — Post 6: The INCO Reform
Source
The Governance Structure as Backlog Producer The $100B+ deferred maintenance backlog and the three completions in 28 years are not primarily products of insufficient funding. They are products of a governance structure — district-based, project-by-project, annually re-competed — that is structurally incapable of delivering major capital projects efficiently. The source of the problem is the management model, not the appropriations level.
Conduit
The Annual Appropriations Competition Each year, inland navigation construction projects compete against each other, against other Corps missions, and against every other federal discretionary spending priority in the Energy and Water appropriations subcommittee. The conduit between congressional intent and infrastructure delivery is an annual competition that produces partial funding, start-stop construction cycles, and the Olmsted pattern of cost multiplication over extended timelines.
Conversion
INCO + Critical Minerals Overlay → Strategic Infrastructure Delivery The INCO conversion is governance reform converting the existing funding stream — without necessarily increasing it — into more efficient project delivery. The critical minerals overlay converts general waterway advocacy into national security and economic competitiveness argument. Together, they convert a transportation infrastructure debate into a statecraft argument that the current political environment is more likely to act on.
Insulation
District Autonomy + Congressional Earmark Relationships The reform that would solve the delivery problem threatens the political relationships that the existing system preserves. District autonomy allows members of Congress to maintain direct relationships with project pipelines in their states. A headquarters-level priority-setting process that overrides district advocacy reduces that political access. The insulation from reform is the political economy of the existing system's beneficiaries — not opponents of waterway investment, but defenders of the current structure through which waterway investment flows.
FSA Wall · Post 6 — The INCO Reform

The Olmsted Lock and Dam cost figures — original estimate ~$775 million, final cost ~$3.1 billion, 26-year construction timeline — are drawn from publicly documented Corps of Engineers project records, Congressional testimony, and published analyses of the project history. Precise cost figures may vary slightly depending on the accounting methodology and whether indirect costs are included; the figures cited reflect the range consistently cited in public documents.

The "three major projects completed in 28 years" characterization is based on the Waterways Council / HDR white paper's analysis of USACE inland navigation project delivery history. The specific count depends on the definition of "major project"; the characterization is used as an indicator of the delivery pace problem, consistent with how the proposal's authors characterize it.

The INCO proposal described in this post is based on the Waterways Council / HDR Engineering white paper released in early 2026. The specific governance structure, staffing model, and legislative vehicle proposed may evolve as the proposal advances through the policy process. The description here reflects the proposal as publicly documented as of early 2026.

The "20–40% cost reduction" and "3–4x improvement in delivery pace" performance estimates are analytical inferences from the governance structure comparison, not from a published INCO cost-benefit analysis or audited projection. They are presented as analytical estimates to illustrate the potential magnitude of improvement, not as precise projections.

Primary Sources & Documentary Record · Post 6

  1. Waterways Council, Inc. / HDR Engineering — "Inland Navigation Construction Organization" white paper, early 2026 (WaterwaysCouncil.org, public)
  2. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — Olmsted Lock and Dam project history; cost and schedule documentation (USACE public project records)
  3. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — Dam Safety Program structure and management model; programmatic delivery documentation (USACE.army.mil, public)
  4. Government Accountability Office — Reports on USACE project management and cost overruns; inland navigation construction delivery analysis (GAO.gov, public)
  5. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Inspector General — Project management efficiency reports; district system documentation (USACE IG public reports)
  6. Congressional Research Service — Inland Waterways Trust Fund structure; WRDA legislative history; waterway infrastructure funding analysis (CRS Reports, public)
  7. Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) 2026 — Legislative process as of April 2026; navigation project authorizations under development (Congress.gov, public)
  8. Inland Waterways Trust Fund — Revenue and balance data; fuel tax rate history (Treasury/OMB public documentation)
  9. American Society of Civil Engineers — Infrastructure Report Card; inland waterways funding gap analysis (ASCE.org, public)
  10. Hidden Arteries: FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series, Posts 1–5 — Trium Publishing House Limited, 2026 (thegipster.blogspot.com) — the project delivery context and strategic importance arguments developed across this series constitute the analytical foundation for the INCO critical minerals overlay proposal in this post
← Post 5: The Great Lakes Sub Verbis · Vera Post 7: The Critical Minerals Connection →

The Hidden Arteries - FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series Post 5 — The Great Lakes — iron ore, limestone, Lakers, and the steel industry’s seasonal foundation

The Hidden Arteries — FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series · Post 5
The Hidden Arteries  ·  FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series Post 5

The Hidden Arteries

The Great Lakes — Iron Ore, Lakers, and the Steel Industry's Seasonal Foundation

The Edmund Fitzgerald Ran With Iron

The Great Lakes shipping system is the oldest and most specialized component of the American inland waterway network — a fleet of self-unloading bulk carriers, purpose-built for lakes that no oceangoing vessel can efficiently serve, moving iron ore from the Minnesota and Michigan ranges to the blast furnaces of Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. They operate on a seasonal schedule determined by ice — roughly March through January — and when they stop, the steel mills begin drawing down the ore stockpiles that a winter's worth of production consumes. The system is invisible until a season is bad, a vessel is lost, or a mill runs short. Then it is briefly visible, and then invisible again.

Series Statement The Hidden Arteries is the third series in the FSA infrastructure trilogy. Posts 1 through 4 established the lock constraint, the Mississippi grain backbone, the Ohio industrial corridor, and the Inola critical minerals model. This post documents the Great Lakes shipping system — the seasonal, self-unloading bulk carrier network that has supplied the American steel industry's raw material requirements for over a century and whose 2025 performance data signals the structural pressures that the steel transition is placing on a fleet that was designed for a different industrial era.

The Edmund Fitzgerald was 729 feet long, carried 26,000 tons of iron ore pellets, and sank in Lake Superior on November 10, 1975, in a storm that produced waves the National Weather Service had not forecast at the intensity they reached. Twenty-nine crew members were lost. The loss of the Fitzgerald became the most famous maritime disaster in Great Lakes history — Gordon Lightfoot made sure of that — but its fame obscures what the vessel and its sisters represent: a purpose-built logistics system of extraordinary efficiency and specificity whose operational logic has remained essentially unchanged for a century while the industrial economy it serves has undergone fundamental transformation.

The modern Great Lakes laker — the self-unloading bulk carrier that is the system's workhorse — is an engineering solution to a specific problem: moving iron ore from the ranges of Minnesota's Mesabi Iron Range and Michigan's Upper Peninsula to the blast furnaces of Indiana Harbor, Burns Harbor, Cleveland, and the Pittsburgh region, across water that is too shallow for oceangoing vessels, too wide for any inland river configuration, and subject to ice conditions that close navigation for roughly two to three months per year. The laker's self-unloading conveyor system allows it to discharge its cargo directly onto the dock at a steel mill without the cranes and stevedore labor that conventional bulk carrier unloading requires. The system is fast, efficient, and completely dependent on the specific fleet, the specific ports, and the specific seasonal schedule that decades of operational refinement have produced.

"The laker is an engineering solution to a specific problem that has not changed in a century: move iron ore across lakes too shallow for ocean ships, too wide for river barges, subject to ice that closes navigation for months. The solution still works. The industrial economy it serves has changed around it." The Hidden Arteries — Post 5
71.3M
Tons — Great Lakes Cargo 2025
Down 8.9% YoY; 8.1% below 5-year average — structural pressure visible in data
39.1M
Tons Iron Ore — 2025
Down 10.8% YoY; foundational steel industry input showing demand softness
~9
Months — Operating Season
Approximately March–January; ice closes navigation for 2–3 winter months
I. The Iron Ore Supply Chain

Duluth to Indiana Harbor: The Industrial Logistics Loop That Built American Steel

The Mesabi Iron Range of northeastern Minnesota is the largest iron ore deposit in the United States — a formation of taconite rock whose iron content, processed into pellets at concentrating plants near the mine sites, provides the primary raw material for the integrated steel mills of the Great Lakes region. The ore leaves the range by rail — short-haul connections from mine to port — arriving at the ore docks of Duluth-Superior, Two Harbors, and Silver Bay on Lake Superior's western shore. There it is loaded into the holds of lake ore carriers, vessels purpose-built for this specific cargo and this specific water, and transported 800 to 1,200 miles to the ore unloading docks at steel mills along the southern shores of Lakes Michigan and Erie.

The steel mill receives the ore through the laker's self-unloading system — a conveyor belt running the length of the vessel's hold that discharges the ore onto the dock through a fixed or movable boom at rates measured in thousands of tons per hour. The ore stockpiles on the dock, accumulating through the navigation season to the inventory levels that the mill's blast furnaces will consume during the winter months when the lakes are closed. The annual navigation season's shipments must be sufficient to carry the mill through to the following spring's ice-out — a logistics planning challenge that the mill's purchasing department and the shipping companies have been coordinating since the integrated steel mill system was established in the early 20th century.

The Self-Unloader Revolution

The self-unloading conveyor system — which most modern Great Lakes ore carriers are equipped with — is what distinguishes the laker from both oceangoing bulk carriers and river barges. An oceangoing bulk carrier unloads through deck hatches using shore-based cranes or grab buckets — a process that requires specialized port equipment and stevedore labor at every destination. A river barge unloads through bottom-dump gates, conveyor transfers, or pumps depending on the commodity. The Great Lakes self-unloader carries its unloading equipment on board, eliminating the need for shore-based crane infrastructure at every port and allowing the vessel to discharge directly onto the stockpile dock through its own boom. The result is faster unloading, lower port infrastructure costs, and operational flexibility that allows the same vessel to call at multiple ports without redesigning the shore infrastructure at each one.

II. The 2025 Data Signal

What Declining Iron Ore Volumes Tell Us About the Steel Transition

The Lake Carriers' Association's 2025 cargo data is worth examining in detail because it reflects structural pressures on the Great Lakes shipping system that the fleet and its industrial customers are navigating simultaneously. Total Great Lakes cargo in 2025 was 71.3 million tons — down 8.9 percent from the prior year and 8.1 percent below the five-year average. Iron ore was down 10.8 percent. Limestone was down 4.7 percent. Coal was down 12 percent. Salt was the only major commodity category with a positive year-over-year result.

These declines are not purely cyclical. They reflect the structural transition in U.S. steelmaking from integrated blast furnace production — which consumes iron ore pellets and limestone flux in large quantities — toward electric arc furnace production, which uses scrap steel as its primary input and requires neither iron ore nor limestone at the volumes that blast furnace steelmaking demands. The shift to electric arc furnace production is driven by the lower capital cost of EAF facilities, the growing availability of scrap steel in a mature recycling economy, and the lower carbon emissions profile that EAF production provides relative to integrated blast furnace operations.

The implication for the Great Lakes shipping system is structural: if the integrated blast furnace capacity of the American steel industry continues to decline relative to electric arc furnace capacity, the demand for Great Lakes iron ore and limestone shipments will decline with it — not necessarily to zero, as integrated blast furnace production will remain essential for the highest-grade steel applications, but to a lower structural level than the system was designed to serve. The fleet, the ore docks, and the port infrastructure that support the current system were built for an era of expanding integrated steelmaking. They are now serving an era of contracting integrated steelmaking.

"The shift to electric arc furnace steelmaking reduces iron ore demand. The fleet that carries that iron ore was built for an expanding integrated steel industry. The 2025 data is not a bad year — it is a structural signal that the industrial economy the Great Lakes system was designed to serve is changing around it." The Hidden Arteries — Post 5
III. The Fleet and Its Age

U.S.-Flag Lakers and the Jones Act Constraint

Great Lakes shipping is subject to the Jones Act — the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, which requires that cargo moved between U.S. ports on navigable waters be carried on U.S.-built, U.S.-flagged, U.S.-owned, and U.S.-crewed vessels. The Jones Act applies to Great Lakes navigation, making the fleet of U.S.-flag lakers the only legally available carriers for iron ore, limestone, coal, and other commodities moving between U.S. Great Lakes ports.

The Jones Act fleet is aging. Many of the major ore carriers operating on the Great Lakes were built in the 1970s and 1980s — vessels that are now 40 to 50 years old and approaching or exceeding their designed operational lifespans. The cost of building a new Jones Act-compliant laker — in a U.S. shipyard, to U.S. labor standards, with U.S. steel and components — is substantially higher than the cost of building a comparable vessel in a foreign shipyard. The economic case for new vessel construction requires a confident projection of future demand — iron ore volumes, steel production levels, and the duration over which the capital cost of a new vessel can be amortized against the revenues it will generate.

In a period when Great Lakes iron ore volumes are declining and the structural transition of the steel industry toward electric arc furnace production creates uncertainty about long-term integrated blast furnace demand, the investment case for new laker construction is challenging. The existing fleet is maintained and extended through life-extension programs — drydock inspections, structural repairs, systems upgrades — but the gap between the maintenance cost of aging vessels and the investment cost of new construction is widening. The fleet that the U.S. steel industry depends on for its primary raw material delivery is getting older, and the market signal for its replacement is ambiguous.

IV. The Soo Locks

One Structure, 80 Million Tons, and an Unacceptable Single Point of Failure

The Soo Locks — the lock complex at Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan, connecting Lake Superior to Lake Huron — is the most consequential chokepoint in the Great Lakes shipping system and one of the most significant single points of failure in the American industrial supply chain. Every vessel moving from Lake Superior to the lower lakes — every iron ore carrier, every limestone carrier, every grain vessel — must pass through the Soo Locks. There is no alternative route. Lake Superior is 21 feet higher than Lake Huron, and the only way for a vessel to navigate between them is through the lock complex.

The Soo Locks complex has four lock chambers. The largest — the Poe Lock, 1,200 feet long and 110 feet wide — is the only lock capable of handling the largest modern lakers, the 1,000-foot vessels that carry the most iron ore most efficiently. The other three chambers — including the MacArthur Lock, a 800-foot chamber — can handle smaller vessels but not the largest ore carriers. If the Poe Lock goes out of service for an extended period, the vessels that can only fit in the Poe Lock cannot transit the Soo at all. They are stranded on Lake Superior.

A 2021 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers study estimated that a six-month closure of the Poe Lock would cost the U.S. economy approximately $1.6 billion per day in economic disruption — steel production curtailments, supply chain disruptions, and the cascading effects of reduced steel availability on the automotive, construction, and defense sectors. The study triggered Congressional action: funding was authorized for the construction of a second 1,200-foot lock at the Soo to provide redundancy for the Poe. Construction is underway as of 2026, with completion targeted for the late 2020s. The second Soo Lock is the most significant inland waterway infrastructure investment currently in progress in the United States — and it addresses a concentration risk that the existing system has been carrying for decades.

FSA Documentation — IV: Great Lakes System Architecture
ElementFunctionCurrent StatusPrimary RiskSteel Industry Dependency
Poe Lock, Soo Locks Only passage for 1,000-ft lakers between Lake Superior and lower lakes Operational; second 1,200-ft lock under construction (completion late 2020s) Single point of failure; closure = $1.6B/day economic disruption (USACE estimate) Critical: all iron ore from Minnesota/Michigan ranges must transit Poe Lock or equivalent
U.S.-flag laker fleet Self-unloading bulk carriers; iron ore, limestone, coal transport Aging; many vessels 40–50 years old; fleet renewal challenged by Jones Act construction cost and demand uncertainty Fleet aging without clear replacement investment signal; Jones Act constraint limits new builds Sole legal carrier for Great Lakes iron ore under Jones Act; no foreign-flag alternative permitted
Duluth-Superior ore docks Iron ore loading from Mesabi Range to lakers; largest ore loading facility in the world Operational; owned by Cleveland-Cliffs (dominant U.S. iron ore producer) Concentration of loading capacity in single company; market structure determines access Foundational: all U.S. Great Lakes iron ore loading passes through Duluth-Superior complex
Steel mill ore unloading docks Self-unloading discharge from laker to stockpile; blast furnace feed Operational at active integrated mills; some capacity retired with blast furnace closures Capacity loss as integrated blast furnaces retire; reduced redundancy in receiving infrastructure Direct: ore must be unloaded at mill dock to feed blast furnace; no alternative input path for integrated production
St. Lawrence Seaway International connection; oceangoing vessels to upper Great Lakes Operational (Canadian-managed); seasonal; size-constrained (Seaway-max vessels) Canadian governance of joint infrastructure; limited U.S. control over access and investment Indirect: allows some international cargo access; not primary iron ore route
FSA Wall The $1.6B/day Poe Lock closure cost estimate is from the 2021 USACE study commissioned in support of the second Soo Lock authorization. This figure has been cited widely in advocacy materials and Congressional testimony; the study methodology and assumptions are in the public record but the figure represents a modeled economic disruption scenario, not an observed outcome. Actual costs would depend on the duration and timing of any closure relative to the steel production and inventory cycle.
V. The Transition Opportunity

What Great Lakes Shipping Could Carry That It Doesn't Yet

The Great Lakes system's commodity transition challenge is also a commodity transition opportunity. The same vessels, the same ports, and the same navigational infrastructure that have moved iron ore and limestone for a century are potentially available for the critical minerals supply chains that the advanced manufacturing economy of the 2030s will require.

The Great Lakes sit at the center of a manufacturing geography that includes the Battery Belt states — Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee — and the critical minerals processing facilities that are beginning to appear in the region. Lithium refining, rare earth oxide production, and the specialty chemical manufacturing that advanced battery production requires are industries that need bulk logistics infrastructure for their raw material inputs. The Great Lakes' existing port infrastructure, its experienced maritime workforce, and its connections to the rail and river systems that feed into the Ohio and Mississippi corridor represent a logistics platform that could serve these new industries without requiring the construction of entirely new infrastructure.

The Great Lakes RENEW initiative — a federal program examining the recovery of critical elements from industrial wastewater and process streams in the Great Lakes basin — represents one dimension of this opportunity. The basin's industrial legacy has left concentrations of valuable materials in wastewater streams that emerging recovery technologies can economically extract. The shipping system that moves those recovered materials to processing facilities is already in place. What is missing is the policy framework and private investment that would connect the recovery technology, the processing infrastructure, and the shipping system into an integrated critical materials supply chain.

FSA Framework — Post 5: The Great Lakes System
Source
The Iron Ore Geography + Seasonal Constraint Minnesota's Mesabi Range and Michigan's Upper Peninsula contain the iron ore. The Great Lakes provide the only cost-effective route between the mines and the mills. Ice closes that route for two to three months per year. The source of the system's value is geographic inevitability — there is no other practical way to move 39 million tons of iron ore from mine to mill at a cost the integrated steel industry can absorb.
Conduit
The Poe Lock as Singular Chokepoint The conduit for everything that moves between Lake Superior and the lower Great Lakes is a single 1,200-foot lock chamber. $1.6 billion per day in estimated economic disruption from its failure is not a worst-case scenario — it is the modeled consequence of a chokepoint that the system has been operating without redundancy for decades. The second Soo Lock under construction is the conduit investment that the system has needed since the Poe Lock became the only large-vessel option.
Conversion
Minnesota Iron → Great Lakes Steel → American Manufacturing The conversion chain is direct and foundational: iron ore becomes steel, steel becomes automotive platforms, defense equipment, EV battery enclosures, grid infrastructure, and the structural components of the Battery Belt's manufacturing facilities. The Great Lakes shipping system is the first link in that conversion chain — and the link whose disruption propagates through every downstream conversion to its end point in the finished product.
Insulation
Operational Invisibility + Structural Transition Ambiguity The Great Lakes system is invisible when it works. The structural transition from blast furnace to electric arc furnace steelmaking creates investment ambiguity that insulates the fleet renewal question from clear resolution — if integrated blast furnace demand is declining, the investment case for new lakers is uncertain, and the fleet ages without replacement. The insulation from adequate investment is the intersection of operational invisibility and strategic uncertainty.
FSA Wall · Post 5 — The Great Lakes

Great Lakes cargo statistics — 71.3 million tons total 2025; 39.1 million tons iron ore; 20.1 million tons limestone; 6.5 million tons coal — are drawn from the Lake Carriers' Association 2025 annual cargo report (public). Year-over-year percentage changes cited are as reported by LCA.

The Poe Lock $1.6 billion per day economic disruption estimate is from the 2021 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers study commissioned in support of the second Soo Lock authorization. This is a modeled scenario estimate; actual disruption costs would depend on timing, duration, steel mill inventory levels, and the availability of alternative supply chains.

The Jones Act application to Great Lakes shipping is documented in the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 and its subsequent interpretations by the Maritime Administration and the courts. The specific cost implications of Jones Act constraints on Great Lakes fleet renewal — specifically, the cost premium of U.S.-built vessels relative to foreign-built equivalents — are not precisely quantified in this post; the characterization of "substantially higher" construction costs reflects published analyses of Jones Act construction cost premiums, which vary by vessel type and market conditions.

The Great Lakes RENEW initiative is described based on publicly available program documentation. Specific facility investments, recovery volumes, and shipping connections are not yet established at a level that permits precise quantification; the initiative is described as an emerging opportunity, not a documented logistics flow.

Primary Sources & Documentary Record · Post 5

  1. Lake Carriers' Association — 2025 Annual Cargo Report; iron ore, limestone, coal, and total tonnage statistics (LakeCarriers.org, public)
  2. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Detroit District — Soo Locks operations; Poe Lock documentation; second 1,200-ft lock construction status (USACE.army.mil, public)
  3. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — 2021 Soo Lock economic disruption study; $1.6B/day estimate methodology (USACE public report, cited in Congressional authorization proceedings)
  4. Maritime Administration (MARAD) — Jones Act application to Great Lakes; U.S.-flag fleet statistics; vessel age data (MARAD.dot.gov, public)
  5. Cleveland-Cliffs — Duluth-Superior ore dock operations; Mesabi Range iron ore production; integrated steelmaking supply chain (ClevelandCliffs.com, SEC filings, public)
  6. American Iron and Steel Institute — integrated vs. electric arc furnace capacity trends; iron ore demand projections (Steel.org, public)
  7. U.S. Geological Survey — Mesabi Iron Range production data; iron ore reserve documentation (USGS.gov, public)
  8. St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation — Seaway operational statistics; U.S.-Canada joint governance documentation (seaway.dot.gov, public)
  9. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Great Lakes RENEW initiative; critical materials recovery from Great Lakes basin (EPA.gov, public)
  10. Iron Loop: FSA Rail Architecture Series, Post 2 — Trium Publishing House Limited, 2026 (thegipster.blogspot.com) — BNSF-CSX counter-merger; Great Lakes steel connection to Battery Belt primary source
← Post 4: The Inola Model Sub Verbis · Vera Post 6: The INCO Reform →

Friday, May 8, 2026

The Hidden Arteries - FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series Post 4 - The Inola Model — the Arkansas River, the $4B aluminum smelter, and the proof-of-concept for critical minerals multimodal logistics. The series’ most original contribution.

The Hidden Arteries — FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series · Post 4
The Hidden Arteries  ·  FSA Inland Waterways Architecture Series Post 4

The Hidden Arteries

The Inola Model — Arkansas River, Critical Minerals, and the Proof-of-Concept for Multimodal Logistics

The First New Smelter in Forty-Five Years

Oklahoma is landlocked. It has no port. It has no ocean access. It has no natural resource of aluminum. What it has is the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System — a 445-mile inland waterway connecting Tulsa to the Mississippi River and the Gulf — and a 2,200-acre industrial park called the Tulsa Port of Inola with direct rail and barge access. That combination was sufficient to attract a $4 billion joint venture between Emirates Global Aluminium and Century Aluminum to build the first new primary aluminum smelter in the United States in forty-five years. This post explains how a river made a landlocked state competitive for the most capital-intensive critical materials investment in a generation — and what that means for the next facility that needs to make the same decision.

Series Statement The Hidden Arteries is the third series in the FSA infrastructure trilogy. Posts 1 through 3 established the lock constraint, the Mississippi grain backbone, and the Ohio industrial corridor. This post documents the series' most original contribution: the Tulsa Port of Inola as the proof-of-concept that rail-barge integration can anchor critical materials manufacturing in landlocked locations — and the template it provides for the rare earth, lithium, and advanced materials processing facilities that the U.S. critical minerals strategy requires.

Primary aluminum production is one of the most logistics-intensive manufacturing processes in the world. A modern smelter consuming 750,000 tonnes of aluminum per year requires approximately 1.5 million tonnes of alumina — the refined aluminum oxide that is the direct feedstock for the electrolytic reduction process — plus the carbon anodes, the fluoride salts, the electrical infrastructure, and the industrial gases that the smelting process demands. The alumina arrives from mining operations in Guinea, Australia, Jamaica, and Brazil — processed at refineries near the bauxite mines and shipped to the smelter as a dry white powder in bulk vessels. For a smelter on a coast, the alumina arrives by ship and is unloaded at the plant's marine terminal. For a smelter in landlocked Oklahoma, the alumina must travel a different route — and the economics of that route determine whether the smelter can compete with its coastal peers.

The Tulsa Port of Inola's answer to this logistics challenge is the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System — 445 miles of controlled waterway connecting the Port of Catoosa near Tulsa to the Mississippi River at the Arkansas-Mississippi border, and from there to the Gulf of Mexico and the global bulk shipping network. Alumina produced in refineries accessible to Gulf ports can move by oceangoing vessel to a Mississippi River terminal, transfer to a barge tow, travel up the Arkansas River to the Port of Inola, and be delivered directly to the smelter's raw material receiving facility. The barge provides the bulk logistics capability that the smelter's economics require — the ability to move millions of tonnes of low-value-per-ton feedstock at a cost per ton-mile that rail and truck cannot match for this volume and commodity type.

"Oklahoma has no port, no ocean access, no aluminum ore. What it has is a 445-mile river connection to the Gulf and a multimodal industrial park that made the logistics economics of a $4 billion smelter viable in a landlocked location. The river turned geography from a liability into an asset." The Hidden Arteries — Post 4
$4B
Investment — EGA + Century Aluminum Smelter
First new U.S. primary aluminum plant since ~1980; 750K tonnes/year capacity
445
Miles — McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River System
18 locks and dams; connects Tulsa to the Mississippi and Gulf of Mexico
$500M
DOE Grant — Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations
Federal support anchoring the project; national security and clean energy rationale
I. The McClellan-Kerr System

445 Miles from Landlocked Oklahoma to the Gulf of Mexico

The McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System is among the least-known major infrastructure investments in American history. Authorized by Congress in the 1940s and completed in 1971, the MKARNS transformed the Arkansas River from a seasonally navigable stream prone to extreme flooding and low-water closure into a controlled nine-foot navigation channel extending 445 miles from the confluence with the Mississippi River at the Arkansas-Oklahoma border to the Port of Catoosa, nine miles northeast of Tulsa. The system required the construction of 18 locks and dams in Arkansas and Oklahoma — engineering works of considerable scale in terrain that presented significant challenges — and the creation of an inland port infrastructure that connected the agricultural and energy economy of eastern Oklahoma to the national and global freight network.

The system moves approximately 10 to 12 million tons of freight annually — modest by Mississippi or Ohio River standards, but significant for a system that connects a state without natural waterway access to the continental navigation network. The commodity mix reflects the Oklahoma economy: agricultural products (grain, soybeans), fertilizers, chemicals, sand and gravel, and petroleum products dominate the historic traffic. The aluminum smelter at Inola will add a new category — bulk alumina inbound and aluminum products outbound — that will increase the system's tonnage and change its commodity profile in ways that argue for the infrastructure investment the MKARNS has needed for decades.

The Verdigris Southern Railroad

The critical rail connection that completes the Inola multimodal architecture is the Verdigris Southern Railroad — a 4.4-mile spur line completed in 2024 that connects the Tulsa Port of Inola directly to Union Pacific's mainline network. This connection is what transforms the port from a barge-only facility into a true multimodal hub: inbound alumina can arrive by barge from Gulf ports via the MKARNS, or by rail from any Union Pacific-served origin; outbound aluminum products can depart by barge for Gulf export markets, or by rail to domestic manufacturing customers anywhere in the UP network.

The rail-barge integration that the Verdigris Southern enables is the operational model that Post 2 of the Iron Loop series identified as the emerging paradigm for inland port logistics: long-distance bulk movement by barge where the economics favor it, domestic distribution by rail where speed and geographic reach favor rail. For the aluminum smelter, the combination means that imported alumina from Gulf-served origins moves by the cheapest mode (barge) while finished aluminum destined for domestic automotive and aerospace customers moves by the fastest domestic mode (rail). The same 2,200-acre industrial park hosts both functions simultaneously, coordinated through a multimodal terminal that handles the commodity transfer between modes.

II. Why Aluminum — and Why Now

The Critical Materials Case for Domestic Primary Production

Aluminum is not typically listed alongside rare earth elements or lithium as a critical material in the national security sense. It is abundant, widely produced globally, and not subject to the Chinese supply chain dominance that makes rare earths and battery materials strategically urgent. But the United States' dependence on imported primary aluminum — the smelted metal that is the starting point for fabricated aluminum products — has been building for decades as domestic smelting capacity has closed in response to energy cost competition from smelters in countries with subsidized electricity.

The United States was the world's largest aluminum producer for most of the 20th century. By 2024, it had fewer than a dozen operating primary smelters, with annual production capacity a fraction of its peak. The gap between domestic demand and domestic production is filled by imports — primarily from Canada, which has hydroelectric power cost advantages, and from countries whose environmental and labor standards are lower than American requirements. For the automotive sector, the aerospace industry, the defense procurement community, and the grid-scale infrastructure projects that require aluminum in quantities that make supply chain reliability a strategic concern, the absence of domestic primary production capacity is a vulnerability that the Inola smelter directly addresses.

The Department of Energy's $500 million grant to the Inola project — issued through the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations — reflects this strategic logic. The grant is framed around clean energy: Emirates Global Aluminium's EX technology process, which the smelter will use, produces lower carbon emissions per tonne of aluminum than conventional Hall-Héroult process smelting. But the national security rationale is equally present in the project's federal support: a domestic primary aluminum smelter with 750,000 tonnes per year capacity changes the supply chain resilience profile of every American aluminum consumer in a way that no amount of recycled aluminum content can fully substitute for.

"The U.S. was the world's largest aluminum producer for most of the 20th century. By 2024 it had fewer than a dozen operating primary smelters. The Inola project does not just add capacity — it demonstrates that domestic primary production can be commercially viable in a landlocked location when the multimodal logistics infrastructure is right." The Hidden Arteries — Post 4
III. The Logistics Economics

How Barge Makes a Landlocked Smelter Competitive

The economics of the Inola smelter's competitive position relative to coastal alternatives rest on a specific cost comparison: what does it cost to deliver 1.5 million tonnes of alumina per year to a smelter at the Port of Inola versus the cost of delivering the same alumina to a hypothetical coastal smelter site in the Gulf Coast region?

The comparison is closer than intuition suggests. A coastal smelter site in Louisiana or Texas receives alumina by oceangoing vessel directly at a marine terminal — a logistics chain that requires no inland transportation beyond the terminal-to-plant move. The cost advantage of coastal location is the elimination of the inland leg entirely. But a coastal smelter in the Gulf region faces its own cost pressures: industrial land in the Gulf Coast corridor commands premium prices relative to the inland Oklahoma market; the labor market competition from the Gulf petrochemical complex increases industrial wages beyond the Oklahoma baseline; and the energy costs — electricity, primarily, which constitutes the largest operating cost for an aluminum smelter — are higher in Gulf Coast power markets than in Oklahoma's utility service territory.

The Inola location's barge logistics cost for alumina delivery offsets these disadvantages. At barge rates of approximately $0.01 to $0.02 per ton-mile, moving 1.5 million tonnes of alumina 500 miles from a Gulf terminal to Inola costs in the range of $7.50 to $15 per tonne of alumina — a logistics premium over coastal delivery that the Oklahoma land cost, labor cost, and energy cost advantages offset and in some analyses exceed. The rail spur completes the picture for outbound aluminum products: finished aluminum moving by Union Pacific to Midwestern automotive and aerospace customers travels efficiently on a direct rail connection that a Gulf Coast smelter serving the same customers would also require. The logistics disadvantage of the landlocked location is real but manageable — and the combination of multimodal infrastructure, energy cost advantage, available industrial land, and federal grant support makes it commercially viable in a way that no purely rail or purely truck logistics solution would permit.

IV. The Template

What Inola Means for Rare Earths, Lithium, and the Critical Minerals Map

The Inola model's most significant implication is not aluminum. It is the template it provides for the rare earth processing, lithium compound production, and critical minerals manufacturing facilities that the U.S. critical minerals strategy — Project Vault, the FORGE program, the Battery Belt build-out — requires. These facilities share with the aluminum smelter a common logistics challenge: they process bulk mineral inputs that arrive from distant origins, require low-cost bulk transportation, and produce outputs that must reach distributed manufacturing customers. They differ from the aluminum smelter in the specific materials they handle, the specialized environmental and safety requirements of those materials, and the smaller scale at which individual facilities typically operate.

The Monazite and Rare Earth Case

Monazite — a rare earth-bearing mineral sand mined in Australia, India, and potentially from U.S. deposits in the Southeast — contains a mix of rare earth elements whose separation and processing requires a series of chemical steps that produce intermediate products (rare earth carbonates, oxides, and metals) at each stage. Energy Fuels, the uranium and rare earth processing company whose White Mesa Mill in Utah is at the center of the U.S. rare earth processing effort, has established the first stage of this processing chain in the United States. The challenge is extending the chain — moving from crude monazite processing to the separated rare earth oxides, metals, and alloys that the defense and clean energy sectors require — at a scale and cost that the global market makes commercially viable.

The barge connection is direct. Monazite arriving at a Gulf port from Australian or Indian origins can move by barge up the Mississippi and Arkansas River systems to an inland processing facility sited at or near an MKARNS-connected port — replicating the Inola model for a different commodity stream. The processed rare earth products can move outbound by rail or barge to domestic and export markets. The water, the chemicals, the energy, and the industrial infrastructure that rare earth processing requires are available along the inland waterway corridors at costs that compete with coastal alternatives — particularly when the federal support programs that the critical minerals strategy provides are factored into the project economics.

The Project Vault Distribution Connection

Project Vault — the U.S. strategic stockpiling program for critical minerals — requires not just the acquisition of minerals but their storage and distribution in ways that make them accessible to the defense industrial base on the timelines that strategic stockpiling requires. A critical minerals stockpile located at a multimodal inland port with rail and barge access can be distributed to processing facilities and defense contractors throughout the inland waterway network and the rail system it connects to. The barge is the distribution mode that makes large-volume, low-cost movement of bulk stockpiled materials possible — moving tonnes of processed rare earth materials from stockpile to processing facility at a cost that dedicated truck or express rail service cannot match.

FSA Documentation — IV: The Inola Template Applied to Critical Minerals
Commodity / Facility TypeInola AnalogyBarge RoleRail RoleMKARNS / Waterway Suitability
Primary aluminum smelter (Inola — actual) Anchor case; $4B, 750K tonnes/year; construction 2026–2030 Inbound alumina/bauxite from Gulf ports; outbound bulk aluminum products Verdigris Southern RR → UP; domestic distribution; high-value product delivery Proven; 445-mile system; 10–12M tonnes annual capacity with headroom
Rare earth oxide / carbonate processing Direct: bulk mineral input (monazite) arrival from Gulf; processed REO output to domestic users Inbound monazite sand or rare earth concentrate from Gulf origins; bulk chemicals for processing Outbound separated REOs and metals to magnet manufacturers, defense contractors Suitable; MKARNS and Mississippi system connect Gulf import points to Arkansas/Oklahoma processing hubs
Lithium compound processing Partial: lithium carbonate/hydroxide for battery manufacturing requires similar bulk inbound, distributed outbound logistics Inbound lithium carbonate from South American or domestic origins via Gulf; bulk acid/chemical inputs Outbound lithium hydroxide to Battery Belt cathode manufacturers; time-sensitive distribution Suitable for bulk input delivery; Ohio River system more proximate to Battery Belt destinations
Uranium yellowcake / nuclear fuel precursor Partial: Energy Fuels White Mesa model; bulk mineral processing with specialized handling Potential: approved packaging; barge economics favorable for bulk movement; existing precedent for radioactive material barge transport Primary current mode; rail's geographic reach and point-to-point service advantage for specialized nuclear materials Possible with appropriate terminal design; regulatory framework for radioactive material barge transport exists but is specialized
Critical minerals Project Vault stockpile distribution Storage and distribution at multimodal inland port; barge for large-volume distribution; rail for targeted delivery Large-volume distribution of stockpiled bulk materials to processing facilities system-wide Targeted delivery to specific defense contractors or processing facilities not on waterway High suitability; inland waterway network provides redundant, low-cost distribution architecture for strategic stockpile
FSA Wall The critical minerals template analysis — rare earths, lithium, uranium — is structural inference from the Inola aluminum model applied to analogous logistics challenges. No specific rare earth, lithium, or uranium processing facility has been announced or permitted at an MKARNS-connected location as of April 2026. The analysis documents the structural suitability and economic logic, not a disclosed development plan.
V. The Infrastructure Constraint

What the MKARNS Needs to Fulfill the Template's Promise

The Inola model's replicability depends on the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System maintaining and improving its operational reliability. The current system operates with 18 locks, a nine-foot navigation channel, and a lock chamber size of 600 feet — the same constraint that forces tow-splitting on the Upper Mississippi. An 8-barge tow is the maximum configuration that the MKARNS can accommodate without splitting, carrying approximately 12,000 tons. The larger 15-barge tows that are standard on the Mississippi mainstem cannot transit the MKARNS intact.

Channel deepening from the current nine-foot authorized depth to a 12-foot depth — a proposal that has been before Congress for years without final funding commitment — would add approximately 200 tonnes of capacity per barge, increasing the cost efficiency of every alumina delivery to Inola and every outbound aluminum shipment from it. Over the aluminum smelter's projected multi-decade operating life, the cumulative freight cost savings from the channel deepening would exceed the capital cost of the project. The same economics apply to every future critical minerals processing facility that locates at an MKARNS-connected site based on the Inola model.

The INCO structural reform proposal — examined in Post 6 of this series — is the governance instrument that could accelerate MKARNS channel deepening and lock modernization from a multi-decade project queue item to a funded, managed, prioritized investment. The aluminum smelter's $4 billion of private capital and $500 million of federal grant support has created the political and economic case for MKARNS investment that general advocacy alone could not — the Corps of Engineers and Congress now have a specific, documented, high-profile use case for the channel deepening investment that the waterway system's advocates have been making in the abstract for years.

FSA Framework — Post 4: The Inola Model
Source
The Critical Minerals Logistics Gap The U.S. critical minerals strategy — Project Vault, FORGE, Battery Belt — requires processing and distribution infrastructure for bulk mineral inputs at costs that no existing logistics framework has fully addressed. The source of the Inola model's significance is that it demonstrates, with $4 billion of private capital and $500 million of federal support, that barge-rail multimodal logistics can close the gap between landlocked processing economics and coastal port convenience.
Conduit
The MKARNS + Verdigris Southern Railroad 445 miles of controlled waterway plus a 4.4-mile rail spur equals the logistics infrastructure that made a $4 billion smelter viable in landlocked Oklahoma. The conduit is specific and physical — the river, the locks, the terminal, the rail connection. Without any one of these elements, the project economics do not work. With all of them, a state with no aluminum ore and no ocean port becomes the site of the most significant domestic primary aluminum investment in forty-five years.
Conversion
Geographic Liability → Strategic Asset Oklahoma's landlocked geography was the obstacle that made coastal aluminum smelter sites appear superior. The MKARNS converted that liability into an asset — lower land costs, lower energy costs, direct barge access to Gulf imports — that the coastal alternative's logistics simplicity cannot fully offset. The conversion is the river's fundamental function: turning geography into economics.
Insulation
The Template's Political Anchor The Inola smelter's $4 billion investment, 1,000 direct jobs, and DOE grant support create a political anchor for MKARNS investment that purely navigational advocacy could not produce. A channel deepening project that was previously a line item in a project queue becomes infrastructure serving a nationally significant critical materials investment. The insulation from inadequate investment that the MKARNS previously faced is partially lifted by the political weight of the anchor project.
FSA Wall · Post 4 — The Inola Model

The Oklahoma Primary Aluminum project details — $4+ billion investment, EGA 60% / Century Aluminum 40% joint venture, 750,000 tonnes per year, ~1,000 direct jobs, construction start late 2026/early 2027, DOE grant of $500 million — are drawn from publicly announced project documentation, Oklahoma state government releases, and DOE grant announcement. Project timeline and final investment figures may evolve before construction completion; cited figures reflect public announcements as of early 2026.

The alumina delivery logistics cost estimate — $7.50 to $15 per tonne for 500-mile barge movement from Gulf terminal to Inola — is derived from published barge rate benchmarks applied to the documented distance and commodity. It is an analytical estimate, not a disclosed project logistics cost. Actual costs depend on barge rates at time of operation, MKARNS toll structure, and specific origin of alumina supply.

The critical minerals template analysis in Section IV is structural inference. No specific rare earth, lithium, or uranium processing facility has been announced or permitted at an MKARNS-connected location as of April 2026. The template is presented as the structural logic of the Inola model applied to analogous logistics challenges, not as a description of disclosed development plans.

MKARNS channel deepening from 9 feet to 12 feet — the proposal described in Section V — is a documented policy proposal that has been before Congress in various forms. It has not received a final funding commitment as of April 2026. The economic case presented is analytical inference from published cost-benefit literature on channel deepening, not a disclosed project cost-benefit study.

Primary Sources & Documentary Record · Post 4

  1. Oklahoma Department of Commerce — Tulsa Port of Inola project announcement; Oklahoma Primary Aluminum joint venture documentation (Oklahoma.gov, public)
  2. U.S. Department of Energy — Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations grant announcement; $500M award to Oklahoma Primary Aluminum project (DOE.gov, public)
  3. Emirates Global Aluminium — EX technology smelting process; Inola project partnership announcement (EGA public corporate communications)
  4. Century Aluminum — Inola joint venture documentation; U.S. primary aluminum capacity context (CenturyAluminum.com, SEC filings, public)
  5. Tulsa Ports — Port of Inola industrial park documentation; 2,200-acre facility description; Verdigris Southern Railroad completion (TulsaPorts.com, public)
  6. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Tulsa District — McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System documentation; 445-mile system; 18 locks and dams (USACE.army.mil, public)
  7. Waterways Council, Inc. — MKARNS infrastructure advocacy; channel deepening proposal; lock modernization documentation (WaterwaysCouncil.org, public)
  8. Energy Fuels Inc. — White Mesa Mill rare earth processing; monazite sand to rare earth oxide documentation (EnegyFuels.com; SEC filings, public)
  9. U.S. Geological Survey — Critical minerals supply chain assessment; rare earth element production and processing geography (USGS.gov, public)
  10. Iron Loop: FSA Rail Architecture Series, Posts 1 and 7 — Trium Publishing House Limited, 2026 (thegipster.blogspot.com) — Battery Belt and critical minerals supply chain primary source; Laredo and USMCA connection
← Post 3: The Ohio Workhorse Sub Verbis · Vera Post 5: The Great Lakes →