California regulators set to vote on desalination plant
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[May 12, 2022] By
Daniel Trotta
COSTA MESA, Calif. (Reuters) - California
regulators on Thursday will vote on whether to approve a proposed $1.4
billion plant to convert seawater to drinking water, a project billed as
a partial solution to a sustained drought that threatens the state's
economic health.
In deciding the fate of the Huntington Beach desalination plant, the
California Coastal Commission must weigh an expert recommendation to
kill the project against pressure from Governor Gavin Newsom to approve
it. The vote will follow a hearing at a Costa Mesa hotel conference
room.
The plant, proposed by Poseidon Water, a company controlled by the
infrastructure arm of Canada's Brookfield Asset Management, would
convert enough Pacific Ocean water into drinking water for 400,000
people. But staff experts at the Coastal Commission said the process
would harm marine life and nearby bird habitat while producing water
that would be costly for low-income consumers.
The staff recommendation for denial also said the plant would be
vulnerable to flooding from rising sea levels that are expected from
human-influenced climate change.
Environmentalists have long campaigned against the plant, saying
desalination decimates ocean life, costs too much money and energy, and
soon would be made obsolete by water recycling.
Days after the staff recommendation was published last month, Newsom
spoke in favor of the project, telling the editorial board of the Bay
Area News Group that rejecting the project would be "a big mistake, a
big setback." He said California has experienced severe drought in seven
of the past 10 years.
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The site of a possible $1.5 billion water desalination plant for the
city of Huntington Beach is shown along the Pacific Ocean in
Huntington Beach, California, U.S., May 11, 2022. Picture taken with
a drone. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The drought has threatened the vibrancy of
California's $3 trillion economy, most directly affecting the $50
billion agriculture industry, but also acting as a drag on energy
production and tourism.
Newsom, who is up for re-election this year with the drought on many
Californians' minds, appoints four of the 12 voting members of the
commission and can remove them at any time.
Poseidon has campaigned to get the project built in Huntington
Beach, about 30 miles (50 km) south of Los Angeles, for more than 20
years, saying it has spent more than $100 million in the process.
Since 2015, Poseidon has operated a similar plant, the largest in
the United States, down the coast in Carlsbad.
The Carlsbad project, which turns ocean water to drinking water in
90 minutes, was built on more elevated land and approved before
statewide regulations governing desalination plants came into
effect.
The company says rejecting the plant would sound "the death knell
for desalination in California."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Richard Pullin)
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