Hariharan, Good to hear from you. The state I was referring to is Illinois which is located in the Central U.S. so it is away from the harsh coastal environments that you have inquired about. However, I have data for bridges located all over the world and, given some time, can located the information you are interested in for coastal applications.
Illinois is an interesting state in that the northern part of the state is located in a rough freeze/thaw environment (i.e. many cycles) while the southern section is in a more temperate environment. Bridges from the southern part experience less corrosion problems as a result of this. Those bridges are not salted up during winter ice and snow removal operations. Thier bridge counterparts in the northern half experience serious problems after only several years of use. It is a stark contrast.
Here in the US, green steel is about $0.5/pound more than black steel. Illinois obvisously thought this differnce to be insignificant (compared to the consequences and other factors) so they incorporate green steel in all bridge elements from the superstructure to the footings.
As for addressing additional concerns, the green steel is subject to stringent testing. In all states, additional rebar is set aside from that project to test the bar strength with emphasis on the performance of the epoxy coating. Also, the delivered lot of epoxy steel is tested for the appropriate coating thickness using resistivity principles. Often times the green steel is subject to 100% ties at the intersections whereas black is 50%. Tie criteria is also more stringent in the top layer of deck reinforcing than the bottom mat. Tie wire for green steel is also epoxy coated as is all resteel appendages like bar chairs etc.
As for the performance of the bond. I haven't heard of this being a significant problem. Of course, as you've stated, the overall effect is less corrosion problems so that maybe this overshadows the bond issue. I'm not sure about that but it is just a guess.