Los Angeles Times

L.A. CLIMATE DEBATE

Utah facility would betray Garcetti’s goals, LADWP told

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As Los Angeles prepares to shut down the coalfired Intermount­ain Power Plant in Utah, climate activists Tuesday urged the city to abandon plans for a gas-powered replacemen­t.

Dozens of environmen­tal groups and neighborho­od councils are urging Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti not to move forward with plans to build an $865-million gasfired power plant in Utah, saying the investment is inconsiste­nt with calls to stem the global climate crisis by phasing out fossil fuels as quickly as possible, and conflicts with Garcetti’s own climate agenda.

At Tuesday’s meeting of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power board of commission­ers, activists pressed city officials to replace the Intermount­ain Power Plant — a coal plant that the utility operates just outside Delta, Utah — entirely with climate-friendly power sources such as wind, solar and battery storage, as well as energy efficiency measures back home.

LADWP is working to shut down the facility by 2025. It’s the last coal plant serving customers in California, and L.A.’s largest source of power.

The utility plans to replace Intermount­ain in part with an $865million

plant that runs on natural gas.

Gas generates less planet-warming carbon dioxide than coal when burned. But it still contribute­s to rising global temperatur­es and climate change consequenc­es, including more destructiv­e wildfires, droughts, floods and heat waves.

In a letter to Garcetti and the mayors of Burbank and Glendale — which are partnering with L.A. to build the gas plant — a coalition of environmen­talists pointed out that Los Angeles City Council recently voted to declare a “climate emergency.”

“The low hanging fruit — literally the least we can do — is decline to build new fossil fuel infrastruc­ture,” the letter reads, echoing the findings of scientists. “New fossil fuel infrastruc­ture guarantees the use and maintenanc­e of that infrastruc­ture for decades to come, ensuring new greenhouse gas emissions at a time where we must be working to eliminate them.”

Several activists at Tuesday’s meeting alluded to Garcetti’s efforts to portray himself as a global leader in the fight against climate change.

This year, he released a sustainabi­lity plan calling for 80% of the city’s cars to run on electricit­y or zeroemissi­on fuel by the mid-2030s, and for Angelenos to drive 2,000 fewer miles each year than they do now.

Last month, he was elected chair of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, a network of megacities with a combined population of more than 700 million.

Also this year, Garcetti overruled LADWP officials when he announced that Los Angeles would shut down three gas-fired power plants along the Southern California coast and invest in clean energy instead, saying, “This is the Green

New Deal.”

“If we don’t want gas in our backyard, it shouldn’t be somewhere else as well,” Ethan Senser, an organizer with Food and Water Watch, said at Tuesday’s LADWP board meeting.

Tom Pike, a member of Los Feliz Neighborho­od Council’s environmen­tal affairs committee, referred to other remarks Garcetti made to The Times. The mayor suggested he was open to being convinced L.A. can do without the Utah gas plant, saying that if the city did build the facility, he hoped it would be “the death cough of gas-based electricit­y generation.”

“Garcetti has invited us to come here and convince him not to build this plant,” Pike said during a brief rally outside LADWP’s downtown headquarte­rs before the board meeting. “We are here to take him up on his invitation.”

The letter to Garcetti was signed by Food and Water Watch and the Center for Biological Diversity, as well as local chapters of groups such as the Sunrise Movement, Extinction Rebellion and the Democratic Socialists of America. Other signatorie­s included four Los Angeles neighborho­od councils and several candidates for L.A. and Glendale city councils.

Several Utah groups signed as well, including Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environmen­t.

LADWP officials say their plans extend beyond just building a gas plant in

Utah. They’re also planning to import large amounts of solar and wind power through the 488-mile transmissi­on line that runs from Intermount­ain Power Plant to Southern California.

They also hope to build a compressed air energy storage facility — basically a giant battery for renewable energy — that takes advantage of the naturally occurring undergroun­d salt dome across the street from the coal plant.

Utility officials have previously said consrtucti­on of the Intermount­ain gas plant would begin by Jan. 1. Asked Tuesday about that timeline, LADWP spokeswoma­n Ellen Cheng said in an email that the facility is “currently in the permitting, detailed design, and contractor procuremen­t phase.”

LADWP officials say that without a traditiona­l power plant in Utah, they won’t have the physical ability to transport solar and wind energy through the transmissi­on line to Los Angeles. They also say they hope to eventually fuel the gas plant with clean-burning hydrogen, although the technology is still being developed and could be prohibitiv­ely expensive.

“Ultimately, Intermount­ain Power Project will be a cleaning-burning power plant,” Marty Adams, LADWP’s general manager, told the utility’s board of commission­ers Tuesday, in response to public comments. “That is the long-term goal.”

Environmen­talists worry the hydrogen plans will never come to fruition, leaving Los Angeles, Burbank and Glendale with an $865-million, 840-megawatt gas plant they might have to shut down with decades left in its usable life. Under California law, electric utilities must transition to 100% climatefri­endly power sources by 2045.

Harrison Wollman, a spokesman for Garcetti, said the city is “transition­ing to 100% renewable energy as quickly as we can, while continuing to provide Angelenos with reliable power.”

“The investment in [Intermount­ain] ensures the longevity of one of our most indispensa­ble transmissi­on lines — which is essential to maximizing future clean energy assets and has the potential to carry enough renewable energy for millions of residents,” Wollman said in an email.

Lucy Garcia, who introduced herself as a retired science teacher, told the LADWP board she was part of the Sierra Club-led campaign earlier this decade that persuaded city officials to shut down the Intermount­ain coal plant ahead of schedule.

“It is heartbreak­ing to me to think that we are going to go back on that, go halfway on that, take half-measures on that,” Garcia said Tuesday. “We have to go completely fossil fuel-free.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? LOS ANGELES plans to replace the coal-fired Intermount­ain Power Plant in Utah in part with an $865-million plant that runs on natural gas. Environmen­tal groups want a climate-friendly replacemen­t.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES plans to replace the coal-fired Intermount­ain Power Plant in Utah in part with an $865-million plant that runs on natural gas. Environmen­tal groups want a climate-friendly replacemen­t.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times BY SAMMY ROTH ?? CLIMATE activists Carolina Forni, left, and Emily Spokes address the LADWP board meeting about its power plant plans.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times BY SAMMY ROTH CLIMATE activists Carolina Forni, left, and Emily Spokes address the LADWP board meeting about its power plant plans.
 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? TOM PIKE, a member of Los Feliz Neighborho­od Council’s environmen­tal affairs committee, speaks at a rally outside LADWP’s headquarte­rs before the board meeting where he spoke against a gas-fired power plant.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times TOM PIKE, a member of Los Feliz Neighborho­od Council’s environmen­tal affairs committee, speaks at a rally outside LADWP’s headquarte­rs before the board meeting where he spoke against a gas-fired power plant.
 ??  ?? MARTY ADAMS, LADWP’s general manager, said the Utah plant will ultimately be clean-burning.
MARTY ADAMS, LADWP’s general manager, said the Utah plant will ultimately be clean-burning.

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