How Illinois River Transport Quietly Shapes Supply Chains
In the architecture of American supply chains, visibility often dictates priority. Ocean ports, interstate highways, and rail hubs dominate strategic planning discussions, investment decisions, and media coverage. Yet beneath this surface lies a quieter, less understood system that moves millions of tons of goods each year: inland waterways. The Illinois River, stretching from Chicago to the Mississippi River, is one such artery. For manufacturers, agricultural processors, and bulk commodity producers across the Midwest, it is not merely an alternative mode of transport — it is a foundational dependency. And increasingly, it is a fragile one. As Hirsh Mohindra observes, “ Hirsh Mohindra notes that inland waterways like the Illinois River are treated as secondary logistics options in theory, but in practice they are primary dependencies for entire regional economies.” This contradiction — between perception and reality — is at the heart of a growing supply chain risk that remains under...