EDITORIAL
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The California Energy Commission is gearing up to make a decision on
whether it should streamline the year-long certification process to get
the AES Corp. power plant’s two defunct generators on line to only 60
days.
This 10-month cut in red tape is part of a series of executive orders
made earlier this month by Gov. Gray Davis. The energy commission must
decide whether the Huntington Beach power plant should be allowed to not
only start up generators No. 3 and No. 4, but start them up sooner than
originally expected. These units were shut down in 1995 by previous plant
owner Southern California Edison Co.
But what does this do for the city of Huntington Beach except put them
in a Catch-22 situation.
On one hand, Huntington Beach -- as well as other parts of the state
-- is in the midst of an energy crisis. Once AES starts up the two
generators, it would increase the plant’s electricity-generating capacity
by about 450 megawatts -- almost twice the power produced today.
Generators No. 1 and No. 2 produce about 430 megawatts together, with a
smaller unit generating about 133 megawatts of electricity.
On the other hand, the city still needs to look out for its residents
and beaches.
Just last month, a technical advisory committee theorized that the
Orange County Sanitation District’s waste water plume from an outfall
pipe may interact with an ocean water cooling system used by the AES.
This correlation may draw sewage shoreward, and therefore be one of
reasons for water contamination and beach closures.
If this is true, then doubling the power plant’s
electricity-generating capacity could only increase the amount of
bacteria found in the ocean.
AES officials are planning to drastically cut down the plant’s
emissions of nitrogen oxide, a gas pollutant produced by generating
power, using catalytic converters that serve as emission scrubbers. That
plan has also drawn concern from the city, which wants assurance that the
chemical ammonia used in the converters will be handled safely.
City officials aren’t asking for much during the state’s certification
of AES. They just want to make sure that environmental issues such as air
pollution, water quality and plant aesthetics will be addressed during
the process.
Maybe this shouldn’t take only two months to do.
In order to complete thorough investigations, the California Energy
Commission should listen to what the public has to say during its
upcoming public hearings, and take the full year to approve AES’s
retrofitting certification.
Only then can a fair and accurate decision on the affects of AES’
electricity-producing generators be known.
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