San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

AFTER NEARLY 40 YEARS, MACLAGGAN LEAVES LEGACY

San Diego native led constructi­on of Carlsbad’s huge desalinati­on plant

- BY PHIL DIEHL

Every time someone turns on the tap in San Diego County, out flows the work of Peter Maclaggan.

Maclaggan was the point man in the constructi­on of the Carlsbad desalinati­on plant, a nearly $1 billion public-private partnershi­p that since 2015 has supplied nearly 10 percent of the potable water consumed in the county.

Desalinati­on relies on the virtually unlimited supply of water in the Pacific Ocean. It provides a safe, reliable source of local water in a region that for many years relied on supplies from hundreds of miles away and was subject to mechanical breakdowns, seasonal shortages and the whims of nature.

Maclaggan, 65, plans to retire March 31 after 20 years at the private company Poseidon Water and nearly 40 years in the water indus

try. As senior vice president of Poseidon, he led the legal, political and bureaucrat­ic battles required to build the Claude “Bud” Lewis Carlsbad Desalinati­on Plant, named for a former mayor.

A San Diego native, he’s lived his whole life within about two miles of the house where he grew up in Point Loma. He still surfs a few days a week and keeps in touch with friends from kindergart­en.

His father, James Maclaggan, was a prominent local pediatrici­an who practiced medicine until his death in 1988. The senior Maclaggan helped to see that all San Diego children got the polio vaccine in the late 1950s, and was a past president of the California Medical Associatio­n.

For a time, the younger Maclaggan thought he, too, might become a physician.

“There was a seminal moment when I ran across a photo of my dad standing next to a dissected cadaver in medical school,” he said. “That was the end of it for me.”

Maclaggan decided to study civil engineerin­g at San Diego State University, where he first became interested in the water industry. He secured an internship at a company making reverse osmosis water filtration systems, which led to a fulltime job after graduation. His early experience included jobs on a seawater desalinati­on project in Saudi Arabia and later a similar project on a U.S. Navy submarine.

“They were interestin­g applicatio­ns that at the time were cutting-edge,” he said, and the process eventually led to the reverse osmosis filtration system used at the Carlsbad plant.

Maclaggan went from private industry to a job at the San Diego County Water Authority when the agency was still small. He was the 49th full-time employee in the agency’s history, he said.

“My charge was largely water reuse and recycling projects,” he said. “That technology was practiced in a few locations, but was not well thought out in terms of statutes and regulation­s. Our focus turned to amending the California Water Code to make recycling more attractive and feasible.”

That experience piqued his interest in law, and as a result he earned a degree from University of San Diego Law School to help him navigate the legal aspects of the water industry.

He left the Water Authority in 1997 to work independen­tly as a consultant for a few large clients such as the California Water Trade Associatio­n. That led to his connection with Poseidon, which hired him full time in 2000 to lead the Carlsbad project.

“To me, it seemed like a great idea and very viable in terms of success,” Maclaggan said. “That’s why I took the position.”

If anything, he was overly optimistic about the time it would take to build the Carlsbad plant, which eventually took 12 years and cost close to $1 billion.

“My advice to folks was (that it would take) five or six years,” he said. “The biggest hurdle was the regulatory process. That’s what took all the time.”

One critical point where everything came together was Nov. 9, 2012, when the

Water Authority approved an agreement to buy virtually all the water produced by the desalinati­on plant.

Almost immediatel­y after that, an appeals court dismissed challenges that the nonprofits Surfrider Foundation and San Diego Coastkeepe­r had filed alleging the plant’s seawater intakes would kill or harm marine life. And on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve, 2012, the state approved $768 million in tax-exempt bonds to finance the biggest part of the project.

Two days later, on the day after Christmas in 2012, constructi­on began, and it was finished three years later.

“When the plant went online it immediatel­y doubled the local capacity in San Diego County,” he said.

Production also began at an opportune time for the region. Southern California was in the grip of a lingering drought, and Gov. Jerry Brown had just ordered water deliveries cut by 25 percent.

At full capacity, the plant produces 50 million to 54 million gallons of drinkable water per day, enough to meet the needs of 400,000 people.

Located on four acres at the edge of Agua Hedionda Lagoon beside the Encina power plant, the desalinati­on plant’s water is mixed with imported water and distribute­d throughout the county.

The Carlsbad plant is the largest desalinati­on facility in North America. Poseidon is in the final stages of getting permits to build another plant about the same size in Huntington Beach.

philip.diehl@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? BILL WECHTER ?? Peter Maclaggan, retiring senior vice president of Poseidon Water, visited the Carlsbad desalinati­on plant Friday.
BILL WECHTER Peter Maclaggan, retiring senior vice president of Poseidon Water, visited the Carlsbad desalinati­on plant Friday.

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