It looks to me like in both of these pics the super tiny bubbles are the reflection of the lamination piece. The black panel was laminated to the clear panel either before or after the tank was built, so bubbles around the edge of that black panel probably don't impact structural integrity at all, unless the clear panel is thinner so that the 2 panels together are considered structural.
Thick black material is a lot more expensive so some builders will laminate a thin piece of black over the clear piece. This is generally OK but it's good practice to built the walls using the correct thickness then consider the laminate just a color layer. So if you thin out the clear wall because the colored wall adds thickness, to me that's pushing it a but but not horrible...I don't think that's what happened here because of that second pic
The small bubbles in the first pic are in the structural seam, sometimes those are really hard to avoid, those don't look horrible. Per the above, the larger ones are over the black part so probably not a concern.
That second pic looks bad but again this is why I think that is just a lamination for color, maybe the edge didn't line up perfectly and left a gap that couldn't be filled or something, but that edge (the black edge) may not need to be structurally bonded to the adjacent material so it's just cosmetic. the clear-to-clear material joint looks like glass = good