MWRA Releases 2024 Outfall Monitoring Results

The Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) is pleased to report in the latest Outfall Monitoring Overview that data continue to show no unexpected or serious effects on Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays from Deer Island Treatment Plant discharges. Water quality remains good and both the plankton and seafloor animal communities are healthy and diverse. A National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit requires MWRA to test the effluent before discharging it into Massachusetts Bay, and to also monitor multiple components of the bay’s ecosystem. 2024 marks the 18th year that Deer Island has been in full compliance with the requirements of the discharge permit, earning MWRA an award from the National Association of Clean Water Agencies. 

Summary of 2024 Results

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Annual discharges of sewage solids 1990-2024.
Annual Deer Island discharges of sewage solids, 1990-2024. MWRA's industrial pretreatment program and secondary sewage treatment starting in 2000 have reduced solids and metals in the effluent discharge. 

 

  • Concentrations of heavy metals like zinc, copper, and lead remain low in the Deer Island effluent discharge, as do organic contaminants like poly-chlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).
  • Massachusetts Bay water quality is good, and data show that the outfall has not led to signs of eutrophication, when nutrients overstimulate phytoplankton growth. 
  • Seafloor communities around the outfall are thriving.  Analyses using data collected during seafloor surveys have shown that the discharge has not influenced the kinds of animals observed in the region.  Instead, the biggest influences of animal community composition are the seafloor sediment (rocky, sandy, etc.) and the water depth. 
  • In 2024 MWRA measured pollutants in winter flounder, lobsters, and blue mussels. Results show continued continued low pollutant levels well below the caution thresholds in all three species. (Below: flounder mercury and lobster PCB levels, 1992-2024.)

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    2024 flounder mercury and lobster PCB
    Mercury levels in flounder and PCBs in lobsters caught near the Massachusetts Bay outfall have remained low.

Boston Harbor Water Quality

The Harbor’s history of receiving poorly treated, nutrient rich sewage had made it one of the most contaminated harbors in the country. This made the Harbor vulnerable to eutrophication, a condition of low dissolved oxygen resulting from an overgrowth of phytoplankton. After MWRA diverted the Deer Island discharge to Massachusetts Bay in 2000, Boston Harbor experienced a large decrease in ammonium, a nutrient that is present in sewage, a large decrease in pathogens, and increases in bottom water dissolved oxygen.  The Harbor is now an urban waterbody with good water quality and healthy seafloor communities and sediments, and these trends continued in 2024. 

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A mantis shrimp burrow at Deer Island flats, near the old Boston Harbor discharge location. The lighter areas show where oxygen has penetrated the sediments, a sign of good health.
A mantis shrimp burrow at Deer Island flats, near the old Boston Harbor discharge location. The lighter areas show where oxygen has penetrated the sediments, a sign of good health.

Environmental Conditions are Changing Throughout the Region

Since MWRA began monitoring in the early 1990s, flounder and mussel populations have declined region-wide. These changes are likely driven by environmental conditions including the increasing temperatures in the Gulf of Maine

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The Gulf of Maine has been warming faster than the global ocean.
The Gulf of Maine has been warming faster than the global ocean. (Figure courtesy of the Gulf of Maine Research Institute, Portland, Maine. 2024 Gulf of Maine Warming Update. https://gmri.org/stories/warming-24

Sampling winter flounder has become more challenging, and one reason is the large amount of entangled lobster traps and other fishing gear resting on the ocean floor, known as "ghost gear."

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"Ghost" fishing gear interferes with flounder collection. (Photo by Michael Moore, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution).
Lost lobster traps and other "ghost" fishing gear interfere with flounder collection. (Photo by Michael Moore, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


 

Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary

Stellwagen Bank supports fisheries and is a major feeding ground for whales. The Sanctuary’s western boundary is about 12 miles east of the MWRA outfall. A recent environmental assessment of the sanctuary found that changes to seafloor habitats and animal communities came mostly from fishing practices, which can change the species makeup of the ocean communities.

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Blue mussels and sea anemones growing on an active outfall diffuser
Blue mussels and sea anemones growing on an active outfall diffuser in 2023. (Photo by Hecker Environmental)