San Diego Union-Tribune

PANEL BACKS DELAY OF POWER PLANT CLOSURES

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Temperatur­es in many California cities are cooling down this week, but a debate is simmering on how to generate enough electricit­y to power the state through extreme weather events while transition­ing away from a reliance on fossil fuels.

The California Energy Commission voted to back a proposal Wednesday to extend the life of three gas power plants along the state’s southern coast through 2026, postponing a shutoff deadline previously set for the end of this year. The proposal would keep the decades-old facilities — Ormond Beach Generating Station, AES Alamitos and AES Huntington Beach — open so they can run during emergencie­s.

The state is at a greater risk of blackouts during major events when many California­ns simultaneo­usly crank up their air conditioni­ng, such as a blistering heat wave.

“We need to move faster in incorporat­ing renewable energy. We need to move faster at incorporat­ing battery storage. We need to build out chargers faster,” Commission­er Patricia Monahan said. “We’re working with all the energy institutio­ns to do that, but we are not there yet.”

The plan, put together by the state’s Department of Water Resources, still needs final approval from the State Water Resources Control Board, which may vote on the issue next week. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n last year creating an energy reserve the state could use as a last resort if there is likely to be an energy shortage. The law allowed the Department of Water Resources to fund or secure power sources in those instances.

The commission acknowledg­ed it was a difficult decision. Environmen­talists say the state needs to transition to more short- and long-term solutions that will help it move away from fossil fuels and to rely more on renewable energy sources like solar and wind. They’re also concerned about the health impacts associated with pollution from gas plants.

Few people spoke in support of keeping the plants open during about three hours of public comment.

Neither GenOn, the company running the Ormond Beach plant, nor AES, which runs the Alamitos and Huntington Beach plants, responded to email requests for comment on the vote.

The three plants were originally set to shut down in 2020 under state regulation­s aimed at power plants that suck up ocean water to cool down their equipment.

At Wednesday’s meeting, activists said residents cannot be sure the state will not decide to again extend the life of these plants in another three years. Siva Gunda, the commission’s vice chair, said the state should better prepare a strategy for ending operations of the plants by 2026.

California has made strides in recent years to move toward renewables. In 2021, more than 37 percent of the state’s electricit­y came from renewable sources, up nearly 3 percent from the previous year, according to the Energy Commission. The state has set out to remove as many carbon emissions from the atmosphere as it emits by 2045.

 ?? JAE C. HONG AP FILE ?? A man pushes a stroller near the AES power plant in Redondo Beach last year. The California Energy Commission voted Wednesday to extend the life of three gas power plants in Southern California through 2026.
JAE C. HONG AP FILE A man pushes a stroller near the AES power plant in Redondo Beach last year. The California Energy Commission voted Wednesday to extend the life of three gas power plants in Southern California through 2026.

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