Trump Tower and Hotel takes in about 20 million gallons of water a day from the Chicago River
The Illinois Attorney General has reached a $4.8-million settlement with Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago, holding it responsible for not getting proper permits for its water-cooling intake system that jeopardizes safety of fish and aquatic life in the Chicago River that it abuts, and requiring system fixes to reduce environmental impacts.
The settlement stems from a September 2024 summary judgment issued by a Cook County Circuit Court judge who found that building owner, 401 North Wabash Venture LLC, violated the Illinois Environmental Protection Act by taking in millions of gallons of river water per day to cool the 96-floor, 1,362-ft-tall tower's HVAC systems and discharging heated water back into the waterway -- both done without obtaining proper permits and without doing mandated studies to reduce the impact on fish and aquatic life.
It was estimated in a lawsuit filed in 2018 by the state attorney general that the tower, completed in 2009, draws in and discharges about 20 million gallons of water a day from the river.
Under the proposed agreement, which resolves violations of Illinois Environmental Protection Act and Illinois Pollution Control Board regulations, Trump International Hotel and Tower will be required to install flow meters to monitor the volume of heated water it discharges into the river. A third party will audit accuracy of the meters, and monthly monitoring data will be shared with all parties taking part in the case. In addition, 401 North Wabash Venture must make changes to its cooling system to prevent aquatic life from becoming trapped.
The Friends of the Chicago River, a nonprofit that joined in the lawsuit against the tower owner, alleges on its website that the company "failed to accurately compute and report the rate at which the skyscraper's cooling system withdraws water by approximately 44% for more than 10 years."
The tower's "complete disregard for the rules carelessly killed countless creatures and degraded the value of the significant public investments over decades to bring about the healthy transformation of the river for people, fish and other aquatic wildlife," said Margaret Frisbie, nonprofit executive director, in a news release.
The settlement, which must be approved by a county judge following a 30-day period for public comments, will cover $1.5 million in civil penalties, $3 million for a supplemental environmental project to restore river habitat, fish and aquatic life and $300,000 in litigation costs.