Poseidon ups offer to city
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Poseidon is offering Huntington Beach a discounted water supply in
hopes of securing approval for its desalination facility at Monday’s
meeting.
Officials with the Connecticut-based company said they’re prepared
to sell Huntington Beach three million gallons of water per day at a
rate 5% cheaper than it currently pays the Municipal Water District
of Orange County if the city gives it a conditional use permit to
build a $250-million desalination plant behind the AES power plant at
Newland Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway.
A coalition of environmentalists and residents living near the
site of the proposed plant are planning their own campaign to stop
the facility. Anti-Poseidon activist Eileen Murphy said her group has
narrowed its strategy to lobbying key council members.
It’s anyone’s guess who will emerge a victor in the closely
watched environmental battle many say will have implications for
dozens of other desalination facilities planned for the California
coast. The council narrowly certified the group’s environmental
impact report at its Sept. 7 meeting and will be asked Monday to
determine whether the benefits of the project outweigh the concerns.
Since the project’s inception, Poseidon officials have argued that
desalinated water is crucial to the growth of Orange County. On
Friday they rolled out a plan to supply about 10% of the city’s water
at a slight discount for the next 30 years, perhaps defusing
activists’ arguments that the plant’s water wouldn’t go to Huntington
Beach.
“It would provide a nominal benefit, but certainly nothing
significant,” Public Works Director Bob Beardsly said, adding the
proposal is only an offer and would have to be negotiated with the
council.
“It adds another dimension to our water portfolio,” he said.
Poseidon Vice-President Billy Owens said the water would protect
against possible long-term disruptions to the water supply. If the
municipal water district decides to cut back imports to Huntington
Beach in a dry year, Poseidon water will be available to meet demand.
“It should insulate them from any type of shortages at all,” he
said.
That would mean Poseidon would be selling the city water at about
half of what it costs to produce, Metropolitan Water District
Official Wes Bannister said.
“Sounds like a good deal to me, but I question some of the
numbers,” he said.
Poseidon is also offering to supply the city an emergency water
supply of up to 10 million gallons of water per day for seven days in
the event of a catastrophic incident like an earthquake or flood.
“Where pipes are broken and normal water supplies can’t be
transmitted through, we would be able to deliver water into the
system,” Owens said. “At a minimum it would protect downtown
Huntington Beach and the southeast neighborhoods from water
disruptions.”
Beardsly also said there was some talk about utilizing Poseidon
technology to help pump water out of a proposed city reservoir near
Poseidon; that might save the city about $1.5 million in
infrastructure costs.
Owens said his group is preparing to negotiate the taxes the city
would receive from the proposal.
“There is also legal protection if there is a change of
ownership,” he said. “The city would be assured that the benefits
would continue with the property, regardless of who the owner is. The
benefits are tied to the property, not Poseidon.”
Those benefits aren’t enough to sway residents like Murphy, who
argue that Poseidon would be detrimental to residents living in the
heavily industrialized southeast neighborhood.
Residents have already had to endure a massive pipeline project by
the Orange County Sanitation District and shouldn’t have to endure
another pipeline project to connect Poseidon with a regional water
distribution system, she said.
Murphy added that many residents are concerned that a similar
effort by Poseidon in Tampa Bay, Fla., never delivered the water it
promised.
“We don’t think they should have approved the environmental impact
report, but that’s a horse out of the barn,” she said.
Instead, her group will continue to lobby Don Hansen and Gil
Coerper, council members she has identified as crucial swing votes.
“We only need one more vote to stop this thing,” she said.
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