Desal decision due
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The City Council will take on its most controversial project of the
year Tuesday night, with dozens of activists and community leaders
lining up to offer their opinions on the Poseidon desalination plant.
On one side of the aisle are the local Republican Party and the
Huntington Beach business community in support of a plan by
Connecticut-based Poseidon Resources to build a $250-million
desalination plant. On the other side are scores of neighbors,
environmental agencies and grass-roots citizen groups trying to stop
a massive industrial project they argue is wrong for Huntington
Beach.
The final decision rests with the Huntington Beach City Council,
who will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday to look at the proposal and consider
approving an environmental report on the facility. If the council
determines the report adequately addresses all the environmental
impacts of the desalination plant, they will be asked to issue
development permits to build the project. It is at that point that
the Huntington Beach City Council will decide whether the Poseidon
project is a good fit for the city.
Poseidon is asking the council to approve plans to build a
desalination facility behind the AES power plant on Newland Avenue
and Pacific Coast Highway.
Proponents for the project argue that desalination is the future
of California’s water demand and that a growing population in Orange
County will need the water.
State Water officials are skeptical of the proposal, arguing that
California’s water needs have been met for the next 20 years.
Desalination might be useful in the distant future, they say, but the
current price of desalinating water, especially the large energy
expenses associated with the technology, don’t currently make it an
economically feasible proposal.
Poseidon officials argue that the costs of desalinated water will
continue to drop, while the price of imported water and pumped ground
water will continue to rise, eventually meeting in the middle.
Desalination proponents also argue that the plant will generate
millions in tax revenues for the city, but it is unclear how they
have tabulated their rates.
Many environmental groups are worried about the impacts of the
project, especially on the ocean. The California Coastal Commission
recently released a 17-page letter blasting an independent
environmental assessment of the project as inadequate and
self-serving.
Then there are the hundreds of residents who live near the
proposed facility in southeast Huntington Beach. The small area is
already home to the aging AES power plant, an almost overflowing
toxic waste dump and a sometimes smelly sewage treatment plant. These
residents argue that they cannot accept any more industrial uses in
their backyards -- especially one as big as Poseidon that will take
at least two years of construction and require the tearing up of city
streets to accommodate a pipeline to connect Poseidon’s water with a
regional distribution system.
It’s now up to the City Council to decide if it should take a
gamble with Poseidon, adding one more industrial use to a beleaguered
part of town but possibly helping to solve Southern California’s
water shortage.
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