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Monterey Bay Aquarium Exempt From California's Ban On Wastewater Dumping

Monterey Bay Aquarium

  First Posted: 10/25/11 05:08 PM ET Updated: 12/25/11 05:12 AM ET

This article comes to us courtesy of California Watch.

By Susanne Rust

Although famous for conservation and its sustainable and environmentally friendly practices, the Monterey Bay Aquarium is also one of the largest wastewater dischargers in the protected Pacific Grove area of the bay.

Last week, the State Water Resources Control Board exempted the aquarium [PDF] from a state ban on dumping wastewater in a marine protected zone.

The board decided the aquarium’s conservation and public education benefits far outweigh any dangers posed by the millions of gallons of treated fish, bird and mammal waste it dumps back into the bay.

“The Monterey Bay Aquarium’s beneficial uses include extensive public outreach and education on the marine environment, basic water quality research, and research to determine the needs and improve the quality of existence for marine life,” said David Clegern, a spokesman for the water board.

According to a report [PDF] released by the board earlier this year, the aquarium takes in about 1,400 gallons of seawater a minute, 24 hours a day, every day of the year. It then discharges more than 2 million gallons a day. The system is open, meaning seawater is pumped in and discharged continually.

The board acknowledges the discharge does contain waste, albeit “at very low levels.” The only exceptions noted were copper in one seawater sample and chlorine in others.

Copper is known to be harmful to marine organisms, damaging creatures’ gills, livers, kidneys and nervous systems. Chlorine can be lethal to many organisms, including salmon and oysters, at low levels.

“None of the seawater samples exhibited toxicity effects,” the report's authors wrote. However, storm water runoff from the aquarium contained waste and in some cases exceeded state standards.

Aquarium officials, for their part, say they do everything they can to minimize the harm the aquarium poses to marine life right off its shore. For instance, the aquarium routes all seawater exposed to birds and mammals through ultraviolet sterilization before dumping it back in the bay. This process gets rid of bacteria and other microbes.

Other discharged water, particularly water that has been in contact with exotic species, is run through ozone treatment in order to kill any larvae or eggs that could potentially reach the bay.

And water treated with chemicals or pharmaceuticals is isolated and not released back into the bay.

“Operating a large public aquarium requires substantial resources and a large staff, and we recognize that our environmental footprint is likewise substantial,” aquarium officials wrote in a brochure [PDF] about the aquarium's commitment to sustainable and environmentally friendly practices, called “Striving for Sustainability.”

"We are doing everything we can to minimize our footprint in the ocean," said Ken Peterson, an aquarium spokesman. "There's no doubt it's a challenge."

The aquarium sits next to the Pacific Grove area, a state-designated Area of Special Biological Significance. Since 1983, as part of its Ocean Plan, the state has banned wastewater discharge into any of the 34 designated marine areas.

In 2004, the water board notified the aquarium that it had to cease storm water and other discharges in the protected area or request an exception under the Ocean Plan.

The aquarium sought an exception in 2006, and the state water board prepared a report on the request.

In April of this year, a public meeting was held to consider the exception, and last week, it was finally approved.

"By and large, this exception allows the aquarium to continue being a public aquarium exposing millions of people every year to marine life in the hopes that we can get them interested and concerned about ocean issues," Peterson said. "There is a value in that, and we are pleased it is recognized and valued by the State Water Resources Control Board."

Susanne Rust is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for Investigative Reporting. Find more California Watch stories here.

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ETT
OBAMA/BIDEN 2012
02:43 PM on 10/27/2011
HP we do not like your misleading headline. It is not very good journalism.
12:03 PM on 10/27/2011
Thanks to all of our fans for recognizing the obvious:

The “waste” from the aquarium is seawater piped in from Monterey Bay and returned to the bay after circulating through the aquarium’s exhibits to sustain 35,000 sea creatures: from giant kelp and strawberry anemones, to sharks, shorebirds and sardines.

It does not include water from the sea otter exhibit, which is diverted to a municipal treatment plant.

It is virtually as clean when it returns to the ocean as it was when it came into the aquarium hours earlier.

Aside from rain runoff, all of our freshwater waste goes into municipal sewer lines for treatment, including the water we use to hose down our awnings and sidewalks, which we divert before it makes it into storm drains and flows into the bay.

Clever headlines have their place, but they should square with the facts.

Ken Peterson, Communications Director
Monterey Bay Aquarium
ETT
OBAMA/BIDEN 2012
02:42 PM on 10/27/2011
Dear Mr. Peterson: Thank you for the information. It is very informative to hear from someone from the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
01:19 PM on 10/28/2011
As a visitor I am aware of how they manage their systems.
Docents at the Aquarium tell this story often in conversation.
This article is misleading and not fact checked at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Neil Pharr
08:17 PM on 10/26/2011
Tuna poop in the 0cean - can you imagine that.
06:09 PM on 10/26/2011
Not a secret. Not actually "dirty". Not a problem. Wish that ALL entities putting water back into our ecology were so diligent.
05:31 PM on 10/26/2011
Since the report is public and the decision to exempt the aquarium from the regulation was made by a public entity, it's hardly a "dirty little secret." Stop trying to drive clicks with misleading headlines.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:30 PM on 10/26/2011
Let's hope Monterey Aquarium doesn't do to the Pacific what the Monaco Aquarium did to the Mediterranean...Releasing a noxious Algae that has deadened parts of the Mediterranean.

Caulerpa taxifolia is a green alga native to tropical waters that typically grows to small size and in limited patches. In the late 1970s this species attracted attention as a fast-growing and decorative aquarium species that became popular in the saltwater aquarium trade. A clone of the species was cultured for display at the Stuttgart Aquarium in Germany and provided to aquariums in France and Monaco. Around 1984 this species apparently escaped or was released from an aquarium into Mediterranean waters, and rapidly spread from an initial patch of about one square yard to over two acres by 1989. Meinesz reports that by 1997 it blanketed more than 11,000 acres of the northern Mediterranean coastline and has recently been reported off northern Africa.
01:22 PM on 10/28/2011
not close too the same issue
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jrmarsh
04:48 PM on 10/26/2011
Now I know the REAL reason they won't let me fish along the coastline of the Aquarium.
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imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
07:08 PM on 10/26/2011
Heck, I've gotten plenty of squid bait less than a 1/4 mile from the aquarium.

That area is one of the most pelagic zones next to a coast in all of the US.
10:26 AM on 10/26/2011
Monterey Bay Aquarium does more than any other institute in CA to help show the dangers to marine life along the coast.

Letting flow into the bay what would flow into the bay if the animal life kept there were still in the wild is hardly a detriment.

There is no story here.
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Chubbster
Always Under Moderation
09:49 AM on 10/26/2011
Waste? It is fish fertilizer.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
09:33 AM on 10/26/2011
You would think with the money they charge for entrance, some of it would be used to invest in a proper waste treatment plant or something like that.
03:15 PM on 10/31/2011
Sounds like you know nothing about the Monterey Bay Aquarium outside of this specious article.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KMBerger
"Cui adhaereo, prae est,"
06:53 PM on 10/31/2011
I only know what the specious article states and it appears there is a problem of pollution. If that is incorrect then what are you doing about it beside criticizing other's comments, huh? I don't live in Monterey, but in Arkansas. I do, however, know something about waste-water treatment facilities and water distribution systems and that is the perspective I wrote from. If you don't like that, all I can say is tough bananas to you.
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09:08 AM on 10/26/2011
They're dumping fish waste and marine mammal waste into the bay? Doesn't that happen everyday anyway?
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CSNC
Living on the edge -- not taking too much space
01:15 AM on 10/26/2011
"Monterey Aquarium Has A Dirty Secret"

Everybody and everything have a dirty secret... I do and I know you do too.

H
01:28 PM on 10/28/2011
unfortunately when I POOP IT DOES go into the bay.
that's the real dirty secret of city's around the Monterrey Bay.
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CSNC
Living on the edge -- not taking too much space
03:23 PM on 10/28/2011
Enid,

Too much information, don't you think?

H