A vital element of the Whyalla Steelworks for over 55 years was its Cokemaking operation.

Coke is an essential ingredient in the ironmaking process, but during the production of coke for use in the Blast Furnace, the cokemaking process also produced a nitrogen-rich water as a by-product, some of which used to be discharged into the OneSteel tidal embayment leading into False Bay.  Historically, the excess nitrogen in this discharge had an adverse effect on the seagrass within the area.

From the mid-1970s through to the mid-1990s, a series of pond systems and a sea wall were installed to help retain this discharge prior to entering the bay.  This created a buffer zone in the form of the combined pond system and embayment where natural processes further reduced the available nutrient discharge load.

In the late 1990’s an engineered Reed Bed Treatment System (RBTS) was installed to achieve a step change in the level of nitrogen discharged.  This system also subsequently allowed the treated effluent to be reused in the Coke Ovens process.

The study showed that, adjacent to the Steelworks, the impacted seagrass had undergone at least a five-time expansion in extent between 1990 to the current time and in some places up to ten times expansion. In addition to the expansion the health of the seagrass near the discharge point, the study also found the seagrass adjacent the discharge point is similar, in terms of both leaf length and biomass, to seagrass at background sites to the south of Whyalla.