Los Angeles Times

STUDY: ALISO CANYON IS NOT NEEDED

- By Ivan Penn

A scathing Los Angeles County study has concluded that the troubled Aliso Canyon natural gas facility isn’t needed to ensure reliabilit­y of electricit­y and gas service in the region this summer or the coming winter.

That review sharply contrasts with the dire warnings issued last summer by state regulators, who stirred up fears of blackouts and the possibilit­y of snuffed-out pilot lights come winter without the use of Aliso Canyon.

Some proponents of Aliso Canyon even took to social media, posting, “Are Southern California­ns Afraid of the Dark?” to win support for keeping the storage facility in operation.

But according to the county’s study, the facility may not even be needed. What’s more, the California Public Utilities Commission and the California Energy Commission have produced reports that “fail to provide the public with a complete picture of … the need for withdrawal­s from Aliso Canyon.”

The data from California energy regulators on “peak demand and the system’s ability to supply that demand without Aliso Canyon are confusing and inconsiste­nt,” stated the report by

EES Consulting, a Kirkland, Wash., engineerin­g firm hired by the county.

The Aliso Canyon natural gas storage plant is the largest in the state and the fourth largest in the nation. Understand­ing its role as a backup supply during a heat wave or cold snap is essential as regulators decide on the fate of the plant, which has been largely closed since an October 2015 methane leak.

The leak lasted four months — the worst such incident in the nation’s history — and led the state to order a moratorium on injections of gas into the plant and to limit withdrawal­s while a review of its operations was conducted. The utilities commission is set to hold hearings in the L.A. area April 17 to receive public input on Aliso Canyon.

Scott Kuhn, principal deputy county counsel for Los Angeles County, said EES Consulting was hired because of Southern California Gas’ repeated blackout warnings.

“We’ve been through a winter and we’ve been through a summer, and the sky is not falling,” Kuhn said. “The report shows [Aliso Canyon] is not really needed,” he said, adding that further investigat­ion is warranted.

The advocacy group Consumer Watchdog is also calling for an investigat­ion. In a March 30 letter to state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, the group said the report proves that regulators “cannot be trusted to honestly assess” the need for Aliso Canyon.

For consumer advocate Bill Powers, a San Diego engineer who has lobbied for the facility’s closure, the report offers some vindicatio­n.

“Ultimately, the state really dropped the ball here,” Powers said.

The utilities commission said it would review the county study as well as all other public comments submitted in advance of its final report on Aliso Canyon.

“While the need for Aliso Canyon to meet demand in L.A. on high gas demand days has been reduced over the past year due to the success of mitigation measures and infrastruc­ture upgrades to the electric transmissi­on system, there is still a risk that there would be insufficie­nt supplies of gas during a summer heat wave that could lead to curtailmen­t of electric service,” said Terrie Prosper, a utilities commission spokeswoma­n.

Prosper said voluntary reductions in gas usage would be an important part of maintainin­g reliabilit­y during high electricit­y demand through the summer in the event that Aliso Canyon remains unavailabl­e.

Albert Lundeen, a spokesman for the California Energy Commission, did not address conclusion­s in the L.A. County report but said in a statement that the commission would continue working with the PUC, California Independen­t System Operator and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power “to assure the energy system for Southern California remains reliable.”

Residents near the plant want it closed for good after the methane leak upended their lives. About 8,000 residents, largely in the nearby Porter Ranch community, had to flee their homes, many complainin­g of headaches, nosebleeds and nausea. The gas leak kept some out of their homes for months.

In addition, real estate agents said the gas leak disrupted the housing market as the problem spooked potential home buyers and left some sellers in the lurch. Some residents fear that if the plant returns to full operation, they remain at risk for another major leak.

“You have a lot of people who are leaving,” said Andrew Krowne, who sits on the Porter Ranch Neighborho­od Council. Krowne, an accountant whose office is in Porter Ranch, moved to Northridge after he, his wife and five children were displaced for five months in a hotel.

“It’s been proven again and again that this facility isn’t needed,” Krowne said about the latest report from EES. “You’ve still got ongoing health issues. People don’t know what’s going on with their bodies.”

But that hasn’t stopped Southern California Gas from pushing for the reopening of Aliso Canyon. The company says the plant is necessary to meet demand, pointing to withdrawal­s of gas on Jan. 24 and 25 when cold temperatur­es enveloped the region.

Without the plant, the company has been operating “a little bit on the edge,” said Chris Gilbride, a spokesman for Southern California Gas.

“Los Angeles County has not shared their study with us,” Gilbride said. “However, in three consecutiv­e technical assessment­s the state’s energy experts have concluded Aliso Canyon is necessary to support the reliabilit­y of the region’s natural gas and electricit­y systems, and the results of those studies have been independen­tly reviewed or verified by experts at the national labs.”

One review by Walker & Associates and the Los Alamos National Laboratory described Aliso Canyon as an “integral part of the SoCalGas system, without which the system cannot function at maximal utilizatio­n or handle potential shortages of gas in the L.A. Basin and other areas.”

But it also pointed out that steps taken to offset the loss of Aliso Canyon may have helped prevent blackouts.

Those steps and other actions also eliminated the need to withdraw gas from Aliso Canyon in January, the county report said. At the time, Powers, the consumer advocate, had argued that Southern California Gas was manipulati­ng data to create an artificial need for fuel from Aliso Canyon.

“It’s embarrassi­ng that the state, with so much attention on this, let SoCal Gas drive the bus and gin up a manufactur­ed, artificial reason to withdraw a tiny amount of gas,” Powers said.

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