OK, well, I think Bob is wrong.
Other than his say so, does he have any evidence?
I cannot even imagine how it could possibly happen.
As I show in the article for the theory of UV formation of ozone:
During UV exposure at this wavelength, O2 molecules in air passing near the bulb absorb the light and are broken apart:
O2 ---> 2O
As with electric discharge units, these oxygen atoms can then combine with O2 to form ozone:
O + O2 ---> O3 (ozone)
For this to happen we'd need:
1. 185 nm light to be produced by the sterilizer.
2. For the O2 in the water to absorb the 185 nm UV before the hugely predominating water molecules and other chemicals in seawater do so.
3. For O atoms to be released from the excited O2 as happens in gas phase.
4. For the O to find, among the vast array of other things to react with in seawater, an O2 molecule to react with.
5. For the O and O2 to react as they do in the gas phase to make O3.
6. For the 254 nm light which is known to break ozone apart to not actually hit the O3 produced
IMO, issues 2, 4 and 6 would each individually make this incredibly unlikely, and together, IMO, they make it not going to happen.
My reading of the literature of UV and seawater suggests that other things like hydroxyl radical, which may have oxidizing properties as well, will be formed. But to say it produces ozone would not seem to be supported by any literature I could find.