Short Wave - Planet Money: How Manatees Got Into Hot Water

Episode Date: April 12, 2022

Today we share the mic with our colleagues at Planet Money to talk about one of our favorite aquatic creatures: manatees. Decades ago, manatees nearly went extinct as their habitat dwindled and boats ...threatened their lives. But power companies noticed something: manatees were hanging out near their power plants, seeking out warm water. So, the power companies teamed up with environmentalists to turn the warm waters near power planets into manatee refuges — saving manatee lives and the power companies money in the process. Now, there's a new conundrum: manatees that are hooked on fossil fuels.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Hey, shortwavers. Today, we are passing the mic to our colleagues at Planet Money to talk about the manatees of Florida. Reporter Alexei Horowitz-Gazi brings us this unusual story about how a power plant is helping restore the state's manatee populations. I know, I know. Makes no sense. But I'm going to let Alexi take it from here. Every once in a while, you see something that shakes you out of the consumer autopilot of everyday life. Something that reminds you that this high-tech global economy of ours is actually just an elaborate contortion of the natural world.
Starting point is 00:00:45 You remember that everything we truck, barter, and exchange is woven into the fabric of something much more ancient. That after millions of years of evolution, we are literally burning the remnants of prehistoric forests. to keep our iPhones charged. I had one of those moments one morning not long ago, at a kind of wildlife sanctuary on the east coast of Florida's Tampa Bay. I was standing at the bustling front entrance with marine biologist Lauren Gomez, waiting for a truck carrying a very special delivery,
Starting point is 00:01:17 a rehabilitated manatee. It's hard to tell what's a tour bus and what's a manatee. This one's just the UPS. Although sometimes they come in a UPS truck. Have they really? Yes. Oh, here it comes. There's the truck.
Starting point is 00:01:29 All right, Lauren is directing the truck in. They've just opened the back door, and there is a rubbly looking manatee inside. For the uninitiated, the Florida manatee, or sea cow, as they're also known, looks a bit like a sentient fingerling potato. But enormous. This guy is on the smaller side at 685 pounds. He's got gray leathery skin, fingernails on his flippers, and a sweet whiskery face, like an extra doughy seal.
Starting point is 00:02:02 Watch your feet. Watch your toes. Everybody clear? Yes. They're lowering the ramp down to the ground at the manatee and a big canvas. Looks like an IKEA bag. This particular manatee is named Berkey, his handlers explain, because he was found as an orphaned calf floundering alone off the Gulf Coast around Thanksgiving.
Starting point is 00:02:23 It was a very cold Thanksgiving. So instead of calling him turkey, we named him Berkey because it was so cold. Like a cold turkey. Yes, exactly. Now it's all starting to make sense. Now, after two years, Berkey is ready to be released back into his natural habitat. The staff lower him onto a foam pad where they buckle a GPS tracking buoy around the skinniest part of his body, right above the tail. What's the skinny part of a manatee called?
Starting point is 00:02:48 It's called a peduncle. A beduncle? Yes. Finally, it's time to head for the water. Around a dozen people gather around Burkey's stretcher and awkwardly shuffle him down a concrete gangway. I think that was just manatee belly squeaking on the ground. And down in the water, surrounded by lush mangroves, are hundreds of wild manatees. It's like a giant floating potato casserole.
Starting point is 00:03:14 We're going straight in. We're going to walk out several feet. We'll open the stretcher as we go in, okay? One, two, three. After a few moments wriggling on the stretcher, burkey glides, I won't quite say gracefully, into the water. So that's his little buoy? That's his little, exactly. That's the GPS tag right there.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Bobbing up at the surface. It's a reunion. And this is kind of like a nature preserve behind us? It is. Yep. This is all part of Manatee Viewing Center. It's about 550 acres. You can just immerse yourself in nature.
Starting point is 00:03:50 And it is beautiful out here. What's that building over there? Over here? That is Big Ben Power Station. So that's the power plant. I guess I should have mentioned. This bucolic Manateee sanctuary it's actually nestled just below the smokestacks of a natural gas and coal-fired power plant,
Starting point is 00:04:10 complete with plumes of steam and giant pyramids of coal in the distance. And on the other side of the water, hundreds of tourists are earnestly marveling at this incredible symbiosis of nature and industry. It all feels a bit dystopian, like an episode of planet Earth mashed up with Black Mirror. But this power plant may just be the best home these manatees have, So that's why returning to nature entails being under some billowing smoke stacks. Right. This is where nature meets technology, for sure. You are now over the clean, warm water discharge canal of Big Ben Power Station, where nature meets technology. Hello and welcome to Planet Money. I'm Alexei Horowitz-Gossey. In the 1970s, environmentalists in Florida
Starting point is 00:04:59 struck a kind of bargain with power companies. They wanted to save the manatees from extinction, and the power companies wanted to save money. Today on the show, the tale, or maybe the peduncle, of how these unlikely allies may have stopped manatees from going the way of the dodo, but got sea cows hooked on fossil fuels along the way. This is usually the part of the story where I would endear you, dear listeners, to the elusive majesty of our animal protagonist, the Florida manatee. But why would I do that when none other than Leonard's Neymoy. Mr. Spock himself narrated a 1981 documentary all about them. Manatees may be wanting in beauty as we define it, but there is no animal that leads a more
Starting point is 00:05:54 peaceful, non-aggressive existence. Their scientific order, Serenia, is named for the sirens that supposedly enticed early sailors. In order to understand what these would-be mermaids have to do with Florida's power plants, you have to talk to the person who actually made that documentary. A guy named Pat Rose. You know, when you meet somebody in a bar or something, like, how do you describe what you do? Are you like, are you a manatee whisperer or a manatee lobbyist? I don't go to bars. But if I'm with my wife, 99 out of 100 times, she's going to already tell people I'm the manatee man. In order to help save the manatees and their habitat, Pat went to grad school for aquatic biology and moved to Florida in the mid-1970s. Manatees had
Starting point is 00:06:42 been recently added to the endangered species list. But Pat says most people didn't know what they were or even that they existed. More people thought a manatee was an insect than it was a marine mammal. Really? And they didn't know the word manatee almost at all. If they did know about them, they were called sea cows. So they needed someone to speak for them, someone to take up for them. Pat knew he needed to get to work. So he offered himself up to one of the state's most active wildlife groups, the Florida Audubon Society, as a sort of scientist-documentarian. And they basically said, what do you want to do? And I said, most of all, I want to work to protect manatees.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And I wanted to fly aerial surveys. I was going to do boat surveys. I was going to do underwater surveys. I was going to do public awareness, poster campaigns. And they essentially said, good. Go find the money to do it. So he started applying for grants, not getting them. There wasn't much state funding.
Starting point is 00:07:41 For the first year or so, Pat was striking out. And then, he and his colleagues at the Florida Audubon Society were approached with a surprising offer for funding from an unexpected source, a company called Florida Power and Light. They were the major utility in Florida, so very, very well-known, had probably one of the larger customer bases in Florida. This is not who Pat expected to be chipping in for environmental research. But here they were, offering to fund a three-year scientific study mapping out where and how manatees lived.
Starting point is 00:08:19 Pat was intrigued. What did you understand their interest was in getting this kind of research done? Well, I think we fully understood that they felt threatened because this was the sort of the heydays of environmental awareness. And one of the people tasked with dealing with that threat was a man named J. Ross Wilcox. He was working at the power company at the time. What happened was that EPA was looking at a variety of power plants, and they were rattling their sabers, and I got thrown into the lion's pit. Ross was hired as Florida Power and Lights chief ecologist back in 1975. How novel was it for a power utility to have a chief ecologist when you first came there?
Starting point is 00:09:03 I would say I was the first of the breed. Since the early 1960s, Ross explains, environmentalist concerns had become. become more and more mainstream. By the early 70s, Richard Nixon was signing landmark bills like the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act into law. We still think of air as free, but clean air is not free. And neither is clean water. The price tag and pollution control is high. Through our years of past carelessness, we incurred a debt to nature, and now that debt is being called. So lots of companies started hiring ecologists like Ross to help them deal with all this new environmental fervor.
Starting point is 00:09:47 And for power companies like Florida Power and Light, one of the most expensive new regulatory threats boiled down to a problem with hot water. Basically, many power plants emit hot water, and high quantities of artificially heated water can have all sorts of negative effects on aquatic ecosystems. It can lead to die-offs of fish and other species. This thermal pollution, as it's called, for a long time was just this negative externality, a harmful side effect that wasn't priced into the cost of doing business. But now Ross's power company, Florida Power and Light, was faced with potentially having to pay for this negative externality to retrofit their operations and install these cooling towers so they wouldn't be spewing hot water back into the environment. And cooling towers are a multi-million dollar proposition.
Starting point is 00:10:38 The cost of these retrofits can range widely, depending on the specific facility, but they can be up to $860 million for one power plant. And so it was around this time in the mid-70s when Ross and his colleagues started toying around with this idea. Like, sure, hot water can be an environmental nightmare for fish and plants and other organisms, but there is one animal that seems to thrive in hot water. The West Indian manatee or sea cow is a large risk of... Okay, it's time for a little manatee science interlude. Basically, while manatees may look blubbery like a whale,
Starting point is 00:11:19 they are in scientific fact, it actually kind of ripped. Breaking the water to breathe, its nostrils flare. And their comparative lack of fat leaves them extremely vulnerable to fluctuating water temperatures. Manatees will literally die if they aren't consistently in water above sick. 68 degrees Fahrenheit. The success of man has meant failure for the manatees. And so many of Florida's manatees would migrate every winter to inland natural springs to get their hot water fix.
Starting point is 00:11:51 But as more and more of that habitat was destroyed or blocked off by development, people started to notice manatees congregating near power plants. And by the mid-70s, manatees had also been added to the newly beefed-up endangered species list. which got Ross and his Florida Power and Light colleagues thinking, what if manatees were the solution to our problem? What if our hot water is actually a positive externality, an industrial side effect that's not only beneficial, but actually essential for this species that the government is legally obligated to protect?
Starting point is 00:12:29 It was an intriguing idea, but there still wasn't enough definitive manatee science to make that argument. And this is where scientists like Pat, the manatee, Manatee Man over at the Audubon Society came in. Scientists who needed funding for their own work. Even at my young age at the time, I was aware that there were biologists that might be hired to tell a company what they wanted to hear. And the last thing in the world I would ever want to be was one of those people. Pat says there were reputational risks to the idea of taking funding from a utility company. So he and his colleagues at Audubon added a stipulation. They would do the study if they could
Starting point is 00:13:07 could have full control over their findings. And the power company agreed. Pat used that sweet, sweet power plant money to buy Florida Audubon a single-engine airplane. And he started flying regular missions to map out the relationship between Florida's manatees and its power plants. And what he found, manatees were flocking to the hot waters of Florida's power plants. And thanks to Pat, there was now definitive data to prove it. what that would mean for the manatees and their strange stream bedfellows after the break.
Starting point is 00:13:52 By the time Pat Rose was documenting how manatees were spending time at power plants, there were only somewhere around 1,000 manatees left. Times were desperate. So Pat took his findings directly to the Florida State House. His mission? To protect the manatees by protecting their warm watering holes. Literally, you have to sign up as a lobbyist. and I coordinated with the different staff of the committees
Starting point is 00:14:16 and asked for opportunities to give slide presentations. He started showing his aerial pictures of manatees huddling for warmth and getting run over by boats. And Pat says those images helped push lawmakers into action. We got the Manatee Sanctuary Act finally passed. So that was the big Florida law for Manatees. That's where we protected springs like Blue Spring, Crystal River, Kings Bay.
Starting point is 00:14:41 Lots of warm water zones. were protected under the law. They implemented speed limits for boats. These were now manatee sanctuaries. And you know what else was protected? Those warm water power plant sites. In order to save the manatees, you had to save the power plants.
Starting point is 00:14:58 Ross Wilcox, chief ecologist at Florida Power and Light, says Pat's aerial manatee photos almost made his case for him. When you looked up from 500 feet and all you saw was shoulder-to-shoulder mansees in the district, Carge Canal. It didn't take much imagination to say that, you know, you turn that water off and those
Starting point is 00:15:20 animals won't be there. Florida Power and Light, as well as other power plants around the state, was eventually able to bolster their case against regulation. That because manatees now depended on them, they shouldn't have to make all those changes to their cooling systems, changes that can cost hundreds of millions of dollars per plant. We not suddenly remind a DPA that, they had a requirement under the Intentatious Species Act to not shut off warm water that might provide a benefit to the manatees. It's kind of like a little technical checkmate or something. It was. It was an interesting face-off, and EPA got backed up against the wall, and they had to blink. And starting in the mid-1980s, the manatees offered the power companies a different kind of value.
Starting point is 00:16:12 the chance to help them rebrand themselves as stewards of the environment. A couple of them set up viewing centers where millions of tourists have since come to commune with the sea cows. I mean, obviously there was a public relations value to the story of the power plants becoming the defenders of wildlife. Did it feel like any of that factored into the decision-making? Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'm sure it maybe didn't go over well with some of the conservation groups. but on the other hand, it's a very positive story. And in some ways, it is a positive story. Power plants became little life rafts for the manatees,
Starting point is 00:16:52 helping them to recover their numbers. Now, hundreds of manatees have died over the last couple of years. Massive algae blooms fed by sewage and fertilizer runoff have caused a collapse in the seagrass they eat. Still, manatees are way better off than they were in the 70s. By 2017, the population had grown to over 6,000. enough that the federal government decided to downlist them from endangered to threatened status. Though, there is another way of looking at this story.
Starting point is 00:17:23 The power companies are still discharging large volumes of warm water into the environment. The manatee's natural habitat is still a fraction of what it used to be. They're still overrun by boats and human visitors. And now, manatees are dependent on one of the main industries driving climate change. As Pat Rose, the would-be Jacques Cousteau, and Manatee Man, reminded me. How many manatees in Florida are dependent on the power industry?
Starting point is 00:17:49 So about 60% of Florida's manatees are dependent on artificial right now. That's huge. That's why we have this dilemma that we're going to have to deal with. The dilemma, Pat, is referring to, is what will happen to the manatees if and when we actually manage to transition from fossil fuels
Starting point is 00:18:06 to renewable energy. And all that artificially heated water stops flowing. Some people have had ideas for how to build back manatee habitat without power plants, from artificial heaters in the short term to removing dams and buying more property to turn into manatee reserves in the long term. But all these options are really expensive. And so Pat's goal now is to convince the power companies
Starting point is 00:18:31 to help create a fund for manatee conservation. Pat says it's the least these companies can do. The utilities have saved billions of dollars over the years. And with some of that savings, I believe they are obligated to not let those manatees die or be harmed because of what they did. It is difficult to know exactly how much the power utilities in Florida have saved thanks to manatees. For decades, sea cows depended on at least 10 power plants for warmth. And the cost of retrofitting each plant can run between tens of millions and up to $860 million. We reached out to Florida Power and Light.
Starting point is 00:19:09 While they said they're committed to working alongside state and federal agencies and environmental organizations to secure the future of the manatees, they did not respond specifically when we asked about Pat's idea of a manatee conservation fund. I asked Pat Rose whether he ever second-guessed his decision to strike a scientific partnership with the power companies. And he told me, no. The research they did together laid the foundation for the manatees recovery. But I can't help feeling more conflicting. On the one hand, Pat's bargain did help the manatees through their most dire moment. At the same time, though, enabling an industry-driving climate change to get around environmental regulations
Starting point is 00:19:51 feels a bit like gambling the whole planet for the sake of one charismatic species, like losing the forest for one particularly cute little tree. The last time the Earth was nearly as hot as it might become by the next century was around 50 million years ago. which coincidentally was around the time manatees took to the sea, waving their would-be flippers goodbye to their land-loving cousins, who would eventually become the elephants. So in a weird way, if they do manage to survive all the obstacles humans have thrown their way, manatees might actually be better adapted for the warming world to come than we are.
Starting point is 00:20:34 Do you ever think about a future in which manatees inherit the earth? It would probably be a pretty peaceful world. What's it look like? It looks like all of our shorelines were allowed to move in naturally, a sea level rose, and the manatees were able to freely graze throughout it, and they will adapt, and they'll be those great gardeners or stewards of the environment. Maybe someday they'll be releasing us back into the wilds. Maybe. I don't know. That might be going a bit too far.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Planet of the Manatees. Right. To see pictures of Berkey the Manatee and his friends hanging out beneath the smokestacks, find us on Instagram at Planet Money. And Planet Money TikTok has been nominated for a Webby Award. If you are a superfan, head on over to the ballot page and throw us a vote. We've put a link in the show notes. Today's episode was produced by Liza Yeager and Sam Yellow Horse Kessler. It was edited by Jess Jang, and Planet Money's executive producer is Alex Goldmark.
Starting point is 00:21:35 Special thanks to Peter Allegona, Jason Shogren, A.A.L. Frank, Jennifer Rainer, Daryl Domning, David Least, and Belisa Oranchic. I'm Alexei Horowitz-Gazi. This is NPR. Thanks for listening.

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