The latest incident at its sewage treatment plant happened after heavy rains knocked out a power transformer.

The Navy鈥檚 sewage treatment plant at Pearl Harbor released 1.89 million gallons of partially treated wastewater offshore Monday amid heavy rains, according to Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam officials.

The water was only partially treated because the rains damaged a transformer powering the plant鈥檚 ultraviolet treatment system, according to a base statement released Tuesday. The transformer was knocked out around 3 p.m. Monday, and the system came back online some five hours later.

The plant does have a backup generator but there was no pathway to connect the plant鈥檚 UV system to that power after the transformer was damaged, according to Charles Anthony, the base鈥檚 director of public affairs.

Aerial view of the Honolulu airport and Pearl Harbor
The Navy’s Hawaii Wastewater Treatment Plant is located near the Honolulu airport. The facility released nearly 2 million gallons of partially treated wastewater offshore Monday amid heavy rains. (Christina Jedra/Civil Beat/2022)

The wastewater entered the ocean at the plant鈥檚 regular release point about 1.5 miles offshore from Pearl Harbor. The state Department of Health asked the Navy to post warning signs along the shore, according to the base statement. 

The UV system is the fourth and final stage to disinfect the water, the Navy added.

In recent years, the Navy has run into numerous problems with government regulators for violations at the plant that have tainted the nearby coastal waters with sewage.聽

In 2022, the health department ordered the Navy to pay nearly $9 million after it found hundreds of clean-water violations at the plant. Among the issues, the state found that six of the eight UV facilities at the plant .

One year earlier, the Navy entered a 鈥渇acilities compliance agreement鈥 with the Environmental Protection Agency to improve conditions at the treatment plant after it found had occurred there. Among the steps to fix things, the Navy had to 鈥渄evelop a plan to prevent and respond to potential infrastructure failures at the plant.鈥 

Anthony on Tuesday said that the Navy has since addressed both the state and federal requirements to fix the plant, and that $75 million of 鈥渟ignificant upgrades鈥 started construction at the facility in the past year.

Meanwhile, a brown water advisory from the health department for all of Oahu, meaning the public should due to the heavy storm runoff.

Civil Beat鈥檚 community health coverage is supported by the Swayne Family Fund of Hawaii Community Foundation, the Cooke Foundation, and Papa Ola Lokahi.

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