Desalination plant debate continues
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Dave Brooks
Is Orange County’s future water supply half empty or half full?
It depends on whom you ask. Officials with Connecticut-based
Poseidon Resources argue that Southern California is in dire need of
a new water supply and would benefit from the company’s proposed
$250-million Huntington Beach desalination plant.
Environmental groups contend the situation is exaggerated and that
Orange County can meet its future needs through simple conservation
measures and advancements in water recycling and reclamation.
The debate will likely play a major role in a scheduled set of
City Council hearings to look at the possible impact of the facility,
proposed to be built by the AES power plant.
The desalination facility would produce about 50 million gallons
of drinking water per day, pumping in seawater through AES’s ocean
intake line. Using a process called reverse osmosis, the water would
then be sent through a series of highly pressurized membrane filters,
separating the salt molecules from water molecules. The remaining
salt waste would be combined with more water from the plant and
delivered back to the sea through AES’s outfall line.
Poseidon officials argue that this water supply is instrumental to
Orange County, which is expected to grow by nearly 26% in the next 25
years.
“This plant is just one component of a larger plan to diversify
California’s water resources,” Poseidon official Billy Owens said.
“The Metropolitan Water District has outlined a number of sources for
future water supply and desalination is a component of that plan.”
Poseidon officials point out that 10 additional desalination
plants are already being planned for California that would provide
240 million gallons a day of fresh water. Unlike the Poseidon
endeavor, however, the proposed plants are all being undertaken by
public agencies.
Metropolitan Water District Board Member Wes Bannister said he
believes that approach is more appropriate for a Huntington Beach
facility. He said he believes desalination is inevitable in
Huntington Beach, given its proximity to the ocean, water recharge
facilities and already existing infrastructure, but believes a water
agency should undertake the project.
“I think there’s a lot of concerns that a private company could go
belly-up taking on such a complicated project, leaving us with a
desalination plant that doesn’t work,” he said.
Others argue that California’s water needs can be met with
conservation measures. Jonas Minton of the Planning and Conservation
League said that a recent report by the group found that California
can meet all of its future water needs simply by increasing urban and
agricultural water conservation practices.
“We already have proof that in the last 10 years, basic
conservation efforts have dramatically decreased the amount of water
we use,” he said. “While the state has continued to grow, water use
has continued to drop.”
Everything from low-flow toilets and showerheads to the use of
native plants for landscaping have improved California’s water
picture, he said. Minton also said that recycling efforts, like the
groundwater replenishment system currently operated by the Orange
County Sanitation District to convert sewage water back to drinking
water, have improved water supplies.
“This is a cost-effective method with little environmental
impact,” he said. “We need to change the paradigm that desalination
can save the state and start looking at what we can do around our own
homes.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
966-4609 or by e-mail at dave.brooks@
latimes.com.
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