Keep Industrial Wastewater Poison Out Of Protected Ecosystems

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Sponsor: Free The Ocean

Half a million gallons of industrial wastewater a day could tip a fragile lagoon into collapse unless regulators act now to protect the water wildlife and communities that depend on it.

Keep Industrial Wastewater Poison Out Of Protected Ecosystems

The Indian River Lagoon is one of the most biologically rich estuaries in North America, stretching more than 150 miles along Florida’s east coast and supporting thousands of species, including manatees, fish, birds, and shellfish.1 It also supports fishing jobs, tourism, and coastal communities that depend on clean, stable water.

That balance is now at risk. Blue Origin has applied for a permit from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to discharge up to 500,000 gallons of industrial wastewater per day into a stormwater system that drains toward the Lagoon.2

An Ecosystem Already at the Edge

The Indian River Lagoon is not starting from a place of strength. Decades of nutrient pollution, altered freshwater flow, seagrass loss, and harmful algal blooms have pushed the estuary into repeated ecological crises.3 Seagrass die-offs have already contributed to starvation events among manatees and declines in fish populations.

At the same time, the Space Coast has seen a rapid expansion of aerospace manufacturing and launch activity. Rocket launches generate shockwaves, vibrations, particulate fallout, and chemical residues that enter surrounding land and water systems.2 These impacts accumulate, placing added stress on shallow estuarine waters that recover slowly, if at all.

Why Wastewater Volume Matters

Even treated industrial wastewater changes the chemistry of an estuary. Excess freshwater alone can act as a pollutant by lowering salinity, which harms seagrass, clams, oysters, and other keystone species.2 Nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus can fuel algal blooms that block sunlight, reduce oxygen, and collapse food webs.

The proposed discharge volume falls just below thresholds that would trigger stricter treatment requirements under Florida law, raising concerns that regulatory safeguards may not match the scale of risk.2

Communities Pay the Price

The Lagoon’s health is directly tied to the local economy. Fishing, charter operations, eco-tourism, waterfront businesses, and property values all depend on clean, functioning water.4 When water quality declines, jobs disappear, tourism slows, and families absorb the loss.

Local governments and residents have already committed hundreds of millions of dollars to restore the Lagoon. Allowing additional industrial discharge risks undoing years of public investment and environmental recovery.4

What Happens Next

Decisions made now will shape the future of the Indian River Lagoon for decades. Strong safeguards, transparency, and public input are essential to protect a shared public resource.

Sign the petition today to urge Florida regulators to protect the Indian River Lagoon, require stronger safeguards, and ensure the community’s voice is heard.

More on this issue:

  1. Ellyn Lapointe, Gizmodo (2 December 2025), “Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin Wants to Dump Millions of Gallons of Waste Into a Protected Lagoon.”
  2. Richard Tribou, Phys.org (4 December 2025), “Blue Origin’s wastewater plans add to Florida’s Indian River Lagoon concerns.”
  3. Anthony Leone, Spectrum News 13 (25 November 2025), “Blue Origin renews permit to dump 500k gallons of wastewater daily into Indian River.”
  4. Rick Neale and Jim Waymer, Florida Today (3 December 2025), “Blue Origin wastewater plan criticized by Indian River Lagoon supporters.”

The Petition

To the Florida Department of Environmental Protection

The Indian River Lagoon is one of Florida’s most vital natural systems and among the most biologically diverse estuaries in North America. It sustains wildlife, supports local fisheries, fuels tourism, and helps protect property values throughout Brevard County. Its survival is directly tied to the well-being of the people and businesses that rely on it.

Blue Origin has requested approval from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to release up to 500,000 gallons of industrial wastewater each day into a stormwater network that ultimately drains toward the Indian River Lagoon. This proposal comes at a moment when the Lagoon is already under severe and ongoing strain.

Rocket activity along the Space Coast has intensified, bringing near-daily environmental pressure. Launches generate intense acoustic forces that can disrupt marine species, while vibrations and increased turbidity interfere with sensitive seagrass beds and fish nurseries. Manufacturing and launch operations also contribute particulate fallout, heavy metals, and chemical residues that settle into surrounding soils and sediments. These impacts do not occur in isolation; they accumulate.

Introducing an additional half-million gallons of industrial wastewater every day is not incremental. It compounds existing damage in an ecosystem already battling nutrient overload, altered salinity, habitat loss, and declining water clarity. Even treated discharges can introduce nutrients and freshwater volumes that trigger algal blooms, reduce oxygen levels, and undermine recovery efforts already underway.

Clean water is essential to environmental stability, economic security, and public health. The Indian River Lagoon supports commercial and recreational fishing, charter operations, eco-tourism, waterfront communities, and the broader coastal economy. When water quality declines, livelihoods disappear, tourism suffers, and families bear the consequences.

For these reasons, we urge the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to take the following actions:

  1. Reject the permit in its current form, or
  2. Require that no industrial wastewater be released into the Indian River Lagoon,
  3. Establish firm, enforceable discharge conditions that prioritize ecological protection,
  4. Require continuous, independent water quality testing conducted by third-party experts,
  5. Ensure complete public access to monitoring data and compliance records, and
  6. Convene a public hearing so community members can meaningfully participate in the decision-making process.

The Indian River Lagoon is a shared public resource, not a disposal site. Protecting it safeguards our environment, our economy, and our future.

Taking these steps will help preserve a healthy lagoon, a resilient coastal community, and lasting benefits for generations to come.

Sincerely,