Los Angeles Times

Coastal officials reject Poseidon proposal

Regulators vote down water company’s plan for desalinati­on plant in Huntington Beach.

- By Ian James

After hearing hours of heated debate, the California Coastal Commission voted against a controvers­ial plan by the company Poseidon Water to build a huge desalinati­on plant in Huntington Beach.

Despite worsening drought and calls from Gov. Gavin Newsom to tap the Pacific Ocean as a source of drinking water, commission­ers voted unanimousl­y against the plan Thursday night. The decision, which was recommende­d by commission staff, may end the company’s plans for the $1.4billion plant.

In denying Poseidon a permit, the commission demonstrat­ed its independen­ce from the Newsom administra­tion and also sent the message that high costs, vocal opposition and hazards such as sea-level rise can present major hurdles for large desalinati­on plants on the California coast.

The governor had said California needs the desalinati­on plant to cope with ex

treme drought, and he recently warned that a vote against the project would be a “big mistake.”

Activists, who called the proposal a boondoggle that would privatize water infrastruc­ture for profit, said the decision was a victory for fact-based regulation over politics.

The project was first proposed more than two decades ago, and the long-running fight has encompasse­d a list of contentiou­s issues. They include the proposed plant’s effect on marine life, whether it was vulnerable to sea-level rise and the company’s heavy political lobbying.

Before casting her vote Thursday night, Vice Chair Caryl Hart said the proposal raised many concerns for her.

“This desal proposal is privatizat­ion of water. It provides a large private profit,” Hart said. She agreed with the agency’s staff and said the site is the wrong place to build a plant, partly because it would be atop an earthquake fault.

She also noted that the company still didn’t have a binding agreement from any water district requesting the water. “It would harm the public welfare,” she said.

Commission­er Dayna Bochco said she agreed with the staff ’s findings and that the impacts on marine life would be “an incredible amount of destructio­n.”

Meagan Harmon, one of the governor’s appointees on the commission, said the project would have a “disproport­ionate impact on the most vulnerable.”

“I wish that I didn’t have to take this vote. I’m not opposed to desalinati­on,” Harmon said.

In testimony leading up to the vote, Poseidon and its supporters argued that building the desalinati­on plant would buttress local water supplies and make the area more resilient. They cited the severe drought in California and the western U.S. and higher temperatur­es brought on by global warming, pointing to the worsening shortages of imported water supplies from the State Water Project and the Colorado River.

Poseidon’s opponents argued the desalinate­d water was unnecessar­y because northern Orange County already has ample groundwate­r supply and is recycling its wastewater. They said the project would only benefit Canadian parent company Brookfield Infrastruc­ture and its investors, while low-income people would be hit especially hard by rate increases.

“Seawater desalinati­on should be the option of last resort,” said Tracy Quinn, president and chief executive of the environmen­tal group Heal the Bay. She said there are better, more economical solutions to bolster water supplies in Orange County.

The company said the costs had yet to be finalized, but that monthly water rates could increase by roughly $3 to $6 per household. The commission’s staff concluded that despite a lack of detailed informatio­n on costs, the water rate hike for the project “would disproport­ionately impact millions of low-income residents.”

When the commission’s staffers recommende­d rejecting the project last month, they wrote in their report that in this area of Orange County, there is a “lack of a near-term need for the project” and that other proposed water projects — including wastewater recycling — would be more costeffect­ive and seem able to address projected demand over the coming decades.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? SPECTATORS cheer at a hearing Thursday in Costa Mesa after coastal officials voted unanimousl­y against Poseidon Water’s desalinati­on plant in Orange County.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times SPECTATORS cheer at a hearing Thursday in Costa Mesa after coastal officials voted unanimousl­y against Poseidon Water’s desalinati­on plant in Orange County.

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