Poseidon is not right for Huntington
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John F. Scott
A beach report last week stated that beaches in Huntington Beach at
Brookhurst Street and at Newland Street were closed for 500 feet up
coast and 500 feet down coast. In light of this ongoing problem, the
decision by the Planning Commission to certify the Poseidon
environmental report is disappointing and incomprehensible.
Huntington Beach has a pollution problem on local beaches that has
defied the best efforts of scientists to correct the problem. Despite
this, the company breezed into the city with an army of paid
scientists and local lobbyists and convinced the Planning Commission
to certify an environmental report that allows Poseidon to dump 50
million gallons of their desalinization waste each day into those
very same waters.
That decision is even more mystifying since the Huntington Beach
Redevelopment Agency, in its effort to capitalize on beach assets,
provided hotels with $67 million of public funds as incentives for
developing in Huntington Beach. Those hotels are just up coast from
the planned ocean dump.
Huntington Beach will not get any of Poseidon’s water. Huntington
Beach will get the ocean and air pollution resulting from the
desalinization of 50 million gallons of potable water each day. Only
$800,000 of tax revenue for the Redevelopment Agency is the benefit
for Huntington Beach. Santa Margarita residents will get the water
without environmental costs, but their water bills will reflect the
Huntington Beach tax. If Poseidon sells this plant to a public
entity, as they did in Tampa Bay, Huntington Beach will be left with
only the pollution.
The California Water Desalinization Task Force is charged with
determining the impact of placing about two dozen desalinization
plants up and down the coast. They are in the process of providing
direction on siting issues, feed water intake, concentrate
management, desalinization technology, energy issues and economic
issues.
The California Coastal Commission has raised many very serious
questions about desalinization. The most basic one is whether
seawater, which is a public trust resource held in common for public
use, should be changed to a commodity for private consumption and
sale.
Finally, the California Energy Commission just released a 400 page
document that studies the effects of AES’s ingesting of up to
500-million gallons of seawater each day and returning it to the
ocean in a significantly warmer condition. It is incomprehensible
that the Planning Commission made a decision of such import for the
residents of Huntington Beach without the benefit of state wide
planning or without addressing some of the basic questions raised by
these documents.
* JOHN F.SCOTT is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“Sounding Off” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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