City officials oppose AES Corp. expansion
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city will meet with officials from AES Corp.
early next month to review an expansion plan that could bring two unused
electricity generators online by summer.
The move comes after the City Council decided at a Dec. 18 meeting to
oppose the power plant expansion unless AES officials promised to address
concerns over the facility’s appearance, possibility as a beach
contamination source, safe use of the chemical ammonia and the amount of
nitrogen oxide produced by its generators.
“I think the lines of cooperation are open between ourselves and the
city,” said Ed Blackford, site manager and president of the AES power
plant in Huntington Beach. “We’ve set plans to meet sometime after the
holidays, though the date hasn’t been finalized yet.”
AES’ plan is to retool units 3 and 4 at their 21730 Newland St. site.
Those units were shut down in 1995, but would allow the power plant to
generate about 450 more megawatts of electricity at a time when the state
is facing an energy crunch.
Blackford and city officials said AES is discussing the expansion with
the California Energy Commission, a state agency in charge of licensing
and siting, which plans to visit the power plant in February before
approving the project. That approval would supersede the concerns of the
city.
City officials stressed their desire to be included in talks between
AES and the energy commission last week, adding their primary concerns
over the plant expansion revolve around air pollution from nitrogen oxide
emissions, which the plant expels as it produces energy.
Last year the plant produced about 450 tons of the gas pollutant from
its two active generators, and the city’s Planning Commission approved a
plan Dec. 12 to install equipment in those generators that use ammonia in
an effort to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by about 90%.The plant also
pumps hot water used for cooling purposes into the ocean, which some
critics believe may draw in runoff from the Orange County Sanitation
District’s pipeline five miles offshore.
“Whatever we have to do to make [AES] lift one small finger to make
their site look nicer, we should do it,” said Councilman Ralph Bauer,
adding that the power plant hasn’t been a good neighbor.
AES officials said the concerns of the City Council are valid ones.
“No one wants a power plant in their backyard, but there are positive
benefits to outweigh the negative ones,” Blackford said. “This isn’t any
sort of power play ... we hope this project is good for California and by
association Huntington Beach.”
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