Foes urge plant battle
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Dave Brooks
Opponents of a planned desalination plant are hoping to stop its
construction the same way they did in December 2003 -- by going after
the environmental report.
Officials with Connecticut-based Poseidon Resources recently
resubmitted their report for public viewing, nearly a year-and-a-half
after the City Council ruled the original draft didn’t adequately
address environmental concerns.
During a special desalination forum at City Hall hosted by project
opponent and Councilwoman Debbie Cook, the opposition again
encouraged local residents to argue that the latest report failed to
address several environmental worries.
Jonas Minton of the Planning and Conservation League of California
said the report still doesn’t deal with concerns about the
environmental safety of the $250 million project’s ocean intake line,
which could draw in more than 100 million gallons of seawater per
day. Minton said he is worried that marine life and larvae would be
killed when they are sucked through the pipeline. He also said the
report doesn’t adequately look at other alternatives.
“We are concerned that the recirculated [environmental report]
prepared by Poseidon does not look at all the impacts of intake,”
Minton said, adding that it also does not look at the alternatives
for how other areas in Orange County could find new water supplies.
Poseidon Senior Vice President Billy Owens said an assessment of
the intake pipe is the responsibility of the AES power plant, the
only major power plant in Orange County, which has controlled the
pipeline for years. He said the desalination plant would only be
using water that AES had already collected for its single-pass
cooling system, rerouting the water to the desalination plant instead
of depositing it directly back into the ocean.
Owens said a statewide study is already underway to determine the
affect of single-pass cooling facilities on marine life.
“From that study, whatever changes are identified that need to be
made, need to be made by the power plant,” Owens said.
Desalination opponents like Minton also encouraged local residents
to challenge Poseidon and leading water agency assertions that
conservation efforts won’t do enough, citing a recent report from the
Department of Water Resource arguing that California could make up
the bulk of its water deficiencies by expanding conservation and
awareness.
Owens cited a different report from the Metropolitan Water
District, which concluded that water conservation was just one
component of Southern California’s greater water needs.
“Given most projections for growth, Southern California is going
to need both conservation and new technologies,” he said. “Included
in that is a call for desalination.”
A public hearing on the project is still months away, but Poseidon
is continuing to push ahead with its public relations campaign
managed by Irvine firm M4 Strategies. Besides drafting dozens of
color glossy brochures and literature, M4 is beginning to enlist
endorsements from community leaders like Dale Dunn of the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce and former City Council candidate Bill
Borden.
Poseidon also is attempting to broaden its argument for the plant
beyond past assertions about the environmental safety and necessity
for the water source, appealing to the city’s general fund needs.
Owens said the plant will generate $1.8 million in tax revenue for
Huntington Beach coffers, a revenue stream that will remain in place
as long as the plant operates.
Besides targeting the environmental report, opponents of a
desalination plant in Huntington Beach argue that the proposed
facility could usher in the privatization of water.
Also at issue is who will get Poseidon’s proposed 50 million
gallons of water per day. While no Southern California water agencies
have agreed to purchase water from Poseidon, Owens said he believes a
deal could easily be reached after the company has received the bulk
of its permits, or is in full operation.
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