Poseidon promises to be good neighbor
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Jenny Marder
A Poseidon official assured the Planning Commission Tuesday that a
new desalination plant would be quiet, unobtrusive and odor free.
“I think it will be a very quiet and discrete neighbor,” said Bill
Owens, vice president of the Poseidon Resources Corp. “It’s low
impact and it won’t be very noisy.”
At a presentation at the commission’s study session on Tuesday
night, Ricky Ramos, the city’s associate city planner unveiled site
plans and landscaping designs for the proposed plant.
The desalination plant, which would be built next door to the AES
Huntington Beach power plant at 21730 Newland St., would produce 50
million gallons of potable, or drinkable, water per day. The city’s
groundwater source has been depleted after four years of drought.
Using a treatment method known as reverse osmosis, the plant would
pump in water from the ocean and run it through a filtration system
that would screen out salt and other impurities and produce a pure
form of drinking water.
The potable water would then be sent through a 10-mile
transmission pipeline from Huntington Beach to the Mesa Consolidated
Water District in Costa Mesa.
From there, it would be delivered to the other parts of the
county.
The site plan showed an 11-acre facility bordered by Newland
Street, Pacific Coast Highway and Edison Avenue. The plant would
house about a dozen structures including buildings for
administration, reverse osmosis, solids handling, chemical storage,
tanks for ammonia, wash water and product water and two pump
stations.
Of the four unused 40-foot fuel storage tanks that are now on the
site, three would have to be demolished.
City staff has been working with Poseidon to make the design as
attractive as an industrial plant can be, Ramos said.
“We want building lines that are more visually appealing and
interesting,” he said. “The new tank will be modern and lower than
the existing tanks. It’s more attractive than what’s existing.”
Some residents from the Southeast area of the city spoke out
against the plant, which would be built in an area designated for
redevelopment.
“The area is evolving,” said Richard Loy, who lives a quarter mile
from the AES plant. “I have real problems with allowing more heavy
industry into the area. Redevelopment is supposed to upgrade, not
downgrade an area.”
Others were worried that it would emit odors and spew out
particles.
Owens said that there will be no odors or emissions coming out of
the plant and that noise would range from 50 to 55 decibels, which he
said is equivalent to daytime traffic on residential streets.
The project would benefit the city, he added, by providing
property tax revenue to the city and an additional emergency water
source in case of drought.
The Planning Commission voted to delay the public hearing two
weeks to give the commissioners time to review the staff report for
the project. Staff is hoping to hold the public hearing on May 27,
Ramos said.
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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