Return to mwra.com home
Massachusetts Water Resources Authority
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DATE:
December 2, 2010
CONTACT:

Ria Convery, Communications Director
(617) 788-1105, <ria.convery@mwra.state.ma.us>

MWRA'S SEWER TREATMENT PLANT AND OUTFALL
CONTINUE TO BENEFIT WATER QUALITY, ECOSYSTEMS

2009 Monitoring Data Released

More Information

Animal "Hardbottom" communities are healthy near the outfall.

image of water near oufall
Rocky bottom of the ocean northeast of MWRA's outfall.
Near the outfall, abundant animal communities, including cod, lobster and rock crab, are thriving. Normal communities of worms, anthropods and mollusks live on the sea floor near the outfall.
image of sea floor

Lush anemone growth on active outfall diffuser.

Complete Results
Results for 2009 are presented in detail in MWRA's 2009 Outfall Monitoring Overview. The full report (PDF) is available for download.

MWRA is pleased to report that test results for 2009 show that the Deer Island Treatment Plant continues to operate as designed, and that discharges through the MWRA Outfall had no unexpected effects on the waters or ecosystems of Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays.

In addition, no impacts of the outfall on the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary were detected. Summaries of effluent results and ambient monitoring results follow.

DEER ISLAND EFFLUENT RESULTS

MWRA is required to perform stringent and specific tests on the Deer Island Treatment Plant and its effluent (the wastewater that is discharged through the MWRA outfall). Deer Island effluent continuously met water quality standards in 2009.

Solids Reduced by Over 90% Since1990

solids in effluent

larger image

The amount of solids in MWRA effluent reached a record low in 2009. Overall, solids discharge levels have been reduced by over 90% since 1990. This means that the Deer Island Treatment Plant has been working effectively to remove particulate matter from the wastewater stream.


Metals Discharges Remained Low in 2009

metals

larger image

Metals in effluent remained at low levels in 2009. Metals entering the plant have been reduced by industrial pre-treatment, and are further removed during secondary treatment so that the effluent meets stringent limits that protect marine life.


Almost All Flow Received Full Secondary Treatment

primary and secondary flows treated

larger image

(Primary secondary flow graph) Deer Island effluent continuously met secondary treatment limits. This indicates that the treatment plant has effectively reduced levels of Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and Carbon Oxygen Demand (cBOD) in wastewater before discharge.

Pesticide in Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay Flounder Declining

chlordane

larger image

Levels of the banned pesticide chlordane in flounder fillets have been decreasing throughout the region compared to the 1990s.

EFFECTS ON THE OCEAN AND ITS INHABITANTS

Researchers test Massachusetts Bay water, sediment and plant/animal communities to ensure that the MWRA outfall's treated effluent does not adversely impact the ocean or its inhabitants. No adverse impacts to the environment of the bays were detected in 2009.

Rate of Liver Disease in Flounder Has Declined Since 1991

liver disease

larger image

In 2009, the rate of early liver disease in flounder remained low compared to 1991-2000, before the new treatment plant came on-line.
An Abundance of Whales in the Bays

crab near outfall

larger image

Healthy whales continue to live in Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays. In 2009 the number and diversity of the zooplankton that whales eat remained normal and typical for the area.

###

Back to top

Posted December 2, 2010