Los Angeles Times

How to get around Grapevine closure

Critics say regional board has glossed over concerns about the environmen­t.

- By Bettina Boxall

With snow levels dipping to 2,000 feet in elevation, even some popular alternativ­es may be closed.

Poseidon Water’s longdelaye­d plans to build one of the West Coast’s biggest seawater desalinati­on plants on the Huntington Beach coastline appear headed for a key approval.

A regional water board is proposing to grant Poseidon permits for a $1-billion desalting facility that would annually produce enough drinking water to supply 100,000 Orange County households.

The board will not vote on the project until March and Poseidon still needs approval from the California Coastal Commission.

But the water board’s tentative permit is a major boost for a project that has been mired in delays and controvers­y since it was first proposed two decades ago.

“We are one step closer to providing Orange County with a 100% drought-proof, climate-resilient new water supply project,” Poseidon communicat­ions director Jessica Jones said in an email.

In a tentative permit that Poseidon opponents quickly criticized, the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board would allow the company to use existing ocean pipes to draw seawater and discharge the brine left over from the desalting process.

“The regional board gave Poseidon everything they asked for,” said Sean Bothwell, executive director of California Coastkeepe­r Alliance, one of several environmen­tal groups that have long fought the project.

“If the permit stays as it is now, we’ll certainly be appealing this,” he added.

As the first major coastal desalinati­on plant to seek approval under new state ocean protection rules, the fate of Poseidon’s Huntington Beach facility could set the course for future projects, including a water district’s proposal to build a seawater desalter off the Los Angeles coast in El Segundo.

The proposed ocean intake off Huntington Beach has been a major point of contention. It would, with some modificati­on, continue a form of seawater withdrawal that the state ordered coastal power plants to phase out because it killed minute marine life.

Poseidon plans to build the desalter next to the AES Huntington Beach Generating Station, and after the power plant stops using seawater for cooling, connect the new desalter to the old AES intake pipe that reaches roughly a quartermil­e into the Pacific Ocean and is big enough for a trac

to drive through.

The state Coastal Commission staff has pushed Poseidon to abandon the open ocean intake, which sucks up plankton, fish larvae and other organisms that are a vital part of the sea’s food chain.

Instead, the commission staff has urged the company to construct an offshore subsurface intake called an infiltrati­on gallery — a grid of perforated collection pipes beneath the ocean floor that draws seawater without pulling in marine organisms.

But it is the regional water board, not the Coastal Commission, that issues permits for Poseidon’s ocean intake and discharge. Citing a provision in the new ocean rules, board staff concluded that subsurface intakes wouldn’t work for such a large-volume desalinati­on operation.

Poseidon has agreed to install fine-mesh screens on the intake to reduce marine mortality. It will also attach diffusing equipment to the end of the outfall pipe to prevent the dense brine eff luent — twice as salty as seawater — from falling to the ocean floor in a deadly mass.

“The tentative order is scientific­ally sound ... and correctly finds the proposed facility complies with the California Ocean Plan by using the best available site, design, technology and mitigation measures feasible,” Jones said.

Ocean advocates argued that the water board proposal ignores the core of the new state desalinati­on safeguards.

“They’re not requiring Poseidon to meet any of the top tier standards in the desalinati­on [rules], which are the critical standards,” said Susan Jordan, executive director of the California Coastal Protection Network.

Despite seawater desalinati­on’s appeal as a drought-proof water supply in a semi-arid state, California has been slow to embrace the coastal plants, which are energy intensive, produce expensive water and exact a toll on the ocean environmen­t.

Poseidon has spent more than $1.6 million on lobbying and political campaign contributi­ons during the last two decades to overcome those reservatio­ns. In 2017, it hired former California Sen. Barbara Boxer to lobby the Coastal Commission.

The company, which is owned by an internatio­nal infrastruc­ture firm, built California’s first big seawater desalter on the Carlsbad coast in San Diego County.

That facility was recently sold to Aberdeen Standard Investment­s for an undistrict closed sum. Poseidon will continue to operate the plant, which has a long-term contract to supply the San Diego County Water Authority.

Poseidon has a nonbinding agreement with the Orange County Water Distor-trailer on the purchase of the Huntington Beach supplies, but no final contract.

A recent study by another Orange County agency concluded that other, less expensive water sources could meet the area’s future demand.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? POSEIDON WATER plans to build the desalter next to the AES Huntington Beach Generating Station, above, and after the power plant stops using seawater for cooling, connect the desalter to the old AES intake pipe that reaches roughly a quarter-mile into the ocean.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times POSEIDON WATER plans to build the desalter next to the AES Huntington Beach Generating Station, above, and after the power plant stops using seawater for cooling, connect the desalter to the old AES intake pipe that reaches roughly a quarter-mile into the ocean.

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