Los Angeles Times

Plans for power plant are pulled

The move comes after regulators recommend the rejection of the natural gas project.

- By Ivan Penn ivan.penn@latimes.com Twitter: @ivanlpenn

A developer suspends a review of a proposed project in Oxnard after regulators urge its rejection.

The developer of a proposed natural gas power plant in Ventura County asked state regulators Monday to suspend review of the plans, in effect ending the controvers­ial project.

In response to regulators’ recommenda­tion this month to reject the project, NRG Energy asked the California Energy Commission to end all hearings regarding its proposal while the company determines whether it will completely withdraw the applicatio­n.

Commission members Janea Scott and Karen Douglas issued a rare statement Oct. 5 recommendi­ng that the full regulatory body reject the Puente power project in Oxnard, after an outcry from residents, local officials and state lawmakers.

The commission­ers, who make up a two-member review committee, received hundreds of messages protesting the project as another potential pollution threat to a community already overwhelme­d by electricit­ygeneratin­g plants.

“We hereby notify the parties and interested members of the public that we intend to issue a [decision] that recommends denial of the project on the grounds that it creates inconsiste­ncies with LORS [laws, ordinances, regulation­s or standards] and significan­t environmen­tal impacts that cannot be mitigated,” Scott and Douglas said.

The commission­ers’ recommenda­tion followed Los Angeles Times investigat­ions that showed the state has overbuilt the electricit­y system, primarily with natural gas plants, and has so much clean energy that it has to shut down some plants while paying other states to take the power California can’t use. The overbuildi­ng has added billions of dollars to ratepayers’ bills in recent years.

The 262-megawatt Puente Energy power plant would be owned and operated by NRG, a Houston electricit­y company. NRG contracted with Southern California Edison to supply power to the utility.

After the commission­ers issued their statement, Edison said the Puente project is needed to help meet demand when older power plants close by 2021: “While there are potential solutions to the needs addressed by the Puente project, it is speculativ­e to assume that preferred resources can be developed on the scale and at the cost needed to competitiv­ely replace the Puente project by 2021.”

In August, the California Independen­t System Operator, which manages the state’s electric grid, released a report detailing how clean energy sources could serve as alternativ­es to building the Puente plant but at a higher cost.

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