Orlando Sentinel

Calif. agency unanimousl­y rejects desalinati­on project

- By Amy Taxin

HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — A California coastal panel has rejected a long-standing proposal to build a $1.4 billion seawater desalinati­on plant to turn Pacific Ocean water into drinking water as the state grapples with persistent drought that is expected to worsen in coming years with climate change.

The state’s Coastal Commission voted unanimousl­y Thursday to deny a permit for Poseidon Water to build a plant to produce 50 million gallons of water a day in Huntington Beach, southeast of Los Angeles.

Poseidon said it was disappoint­ed in the decision.

“California continues to face a punishing drought, with no end in sight,” a company statement said. “Every day, we see new calls for conservati­on as reservoir levels drop to dangerous lows. We firmly believe that this desalinati­on project would have created a sustainabl­e, drought-tolerant source of water.”

The vote came after a heated meeting before the commission attended by dozens of supporters and critics of the plan. It was considered a crucial decision on the future of the plant after years of other hearings and delays.

Poseidon’s long-running proposal was supported by Gov. Gavin Newsom but faced ardent opposition from environmen­talists who said drawing in large amounts of ocean water and releasing salty discharge back into the ocean would kill billions of tiny marine organisms that make up the base of the food chain along a large swath of the coast.

“The ocean is under attack” from climate change already, Commission­er Dayna Bochco said. “I cannot say in good conscience that this amount of damage is OK.”

Other critics said the water would be too expensive and wasn’t urgently needed in the area where it would be built, which is less dependent on state and federal water due to an ample aquifer and water recycling program.

Commission­ers cited those issues in following a staff recommenda­tion and rejecting the proposal. They also cited the energy cost of running the plant and the fact that it would sit in an earthquake fault zone.

Before voting, the 12-member commission heard hours of comments from scores of people packed into a hotel meeting room in the Orange County city of Costa Mesa in addition to those tuning in online.

At the meeting, supporters wore orange and yellow constructi­on vests and toted signs saying “support desal!”

Opponents carried signs reading “No Poseidon” and “Do not $ell our coast.”

California has spent most of the last 15 years in drought conditions. Its normal wet season that runs from late fall to the end of winter was especially dry this year and as a result, 95% of the state is classified as in severe drought.

The country’s largest seawater desalinati­on plant is already operating in nearby San Diego County, and there are also coastal plants in Florida.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP ?? The AES Huntington Beach Energy Center in Huntington Beach, Calif., currently occupies the proposed site of a hotly contested seawater desalinati­on plant.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP The AES Huntington Beach Energy Center in Huntington Beach, Calif., currently occupies the proposed site of a hotly contested seawater desalinati­on plant.

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