NATIONAL
 ESTUARY
 PROGRAM
NITROGEN  MANAGEMENT  CONSORTIUM
Recovery of seagrasses in Tampa Bay to levels observed in 1950 is a long-term goal adopted by the Tampa Bay Estuary Program partners. Nitrogen controls
from wastewater treatment plants, stormwater treatment, fertilizer manufacturers, and power plants participating in the Tampa Bay Nitrogen Management
Consortium resulted in a 60 percent TN load reduction compared to the mid-1970s. As a result, water quality targets are being met and bay-wide seagrass
coverage in 2006 was the highest recorded since 1950.
THE NATIONAL ESTUARY PROGRAM IN ACTION
                                                                              Tampa Bay Estuary  Program
TBEP  is working  with  local
governments and industries to
reduce nitrogen loadings via a
Clean Water Act regulatory re-
quirement called a  Total Maxi-
mum Daily Load (TMDL).  This
complex process is  being coor-
dinated by the TBEP through its
Nitrogen  Management Consor-
tium, an innovative public-private
partnership whose members in-
clude Tampa, St. Petersburg, and
other local governments, along
with key industries bordering
the bay, such as electric utilities,
fertilizer manufacturers, and ag-
ricultural operations.

Over the past decade, the land-
mark  efforts of the Nitrogen
          Management  Consortium have
          reduced nitrogen flowing into the
          bay by more than 400 tons even
          as the region's population grew
          by nearly a million people. This
          management  success was ac-
          complished through the comple-
          tion of more than 250 projects
          to reduce nitrogen discharges to
          the bay, from sweeping streets
          to constructing regional storm-
          water treatment facilities to re-
          storing wetlands that filter pol-
          lutants naturally.

          As  a result,  water quality in
          Tampa  Bay has  steadily im-
          proved. For the past three years,
          water clarity goals were met in
          all major bay segments for the
first time since record-keeping
began in 1974. Life-sustaining
seagrasses, a key barometer of
the bay's health, continue to re-
cover at an average rate of 400
acres a year. In fact, these are
the highest observed seagrass
acreage estimates since 1950 -
and a 6,000-acre increase since
the 1980s.

Previously,  the  Consortium's
initiatives have been voluntary,
but meeting the new state and
Federal nitrogen  limits  will re-
quire firm commitments  from
the Consortium partners. A ma-
jor focus of the new nitrogen
management strategy  will  be
allocating nitrogen loads for ma-
jor point and non-point sources.
TBEP and the Consortium have
traditionally focused on overall
loadings and worked as a part-
nership to ensure that nitrogen
loadings in each bay  segment
do not exceed  average levels
measured  in 1992-1994. Un-
der  Federal regulations, how-
ever, cumulative permitted point
source  loads  cannot  exceed
maximum  allowed  levels. The
Consortium's strategy will deter-
mine what share of the nitrogen
                                                                                 Turtle Grass - one of three types of seagrasses found in Tampa Bay. Photo Credit: Lindsay Cross
 EFFECTIVE
                   EFFICIENT
                  ADAPTIVE
                          COLLABORATIVE

-------
           Sources of Nitrogen in Tampa Bay
            3%
        Groundwater
         & Springs
                                 21%
                             Atmospheric
                              Deposition
      9%
  Municipal
  Wastewater
    3%
  Industrial
 Wastewater
      1%
  Accidental      \
Fertilizer Losses
   6%
 Mining
                                                    20%
                                                 Residential
          1%
      Undeveloped
          Land
         12%
      Intensive
      Agriculture
   9%
Commercial/
 Industrial
                          NITROGEN REDUCTION  PROJECT:

                          Tampa Electric Company's TECO Big Bend facility on the southeastern shore of Tampa Bay is one of the largest
                          coal-burning power plants in Florida. Through agreements with the EPA and the Florida Department of Environ-
                          mental Protection, TECO is installing air pollution control systems ("scrubbers") at four generating units at Big
                          Bend to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions. The first of these scrubbers was installed in 2007, with an annual
                          estimated NOx reduction of 3,142 tons per year, or 79.8 percent of the existing emissions. That translates into
                          a projected 13.5% decrease in nitrogen deposition to Tampa Bay from just this unit in three years.
                            15%
                       Pasture/Range
                           Lands
loads needed to meet the TMDL
limits will be assumed by each
local government as well as key
industries such as fertilizer man-
ufacturers and electric utilities.

The Consortium is working now
to reallocate those  permitted
loads in  a  fair  and equitable
manner so  that they meet the
state  and  Federal  standards.
Basin-wide   allocations   were
completed in 2008. The final al-
location, including new permit-
ted levels for individual sources
that comply with EPA limits, must
be completed by July 2009. The
Consortium is a true example of
adaptive  management through
a watershed approach to meet
water quality goals. Further ni-
trogen reduction associated with
seagrass recovery  will remain
challenging as population and
development pressures increase
in the region.

Visit www.tbep.org  to  learn
more about this and other TBEP
efforts.
EPA's  National Estuary Program
(NEP) is a unique and successful
coastal watershed-based program
established  in  1987 under  the
Clean   Water  Act Amendments.
The NEP involves the public and
collaborates with partners to pro-
tect, restore, and maintain the wa-
ter quality and ecological integrity
of 28 estuaries of national signifi-
cance located in 18 coastal states
and Puerto Rico.

For more information about  the
NEP go to  www.epa.gov/owow/
estuaries.
   The NEP:  Implementing the Clean Water Act in ways that are Effective, Efficient, Adaptive, and Collaborative.
                                                                                                     EPA-842F09001

-------