An invite to tour the AES plant...
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An invite to tour
the AES plant
In several recent Independent newspapers, there were letters to
the editor regarding the proposed Poseidon desalination project. A
couple of these letters also referenced the AES power plant. As the
current general manager of the AES facility, and a resident of
Huntington Beach, I wanted to clarify several common misconceptions
that were mentioned in the letters.
First, the AES power plant burns natural gas -- similar to the gas
that is burned in your home -- not oil as one reader suggested.
Secondly, the visible plume that is often seen coming out the
stacks is steam, not smoke. It is a byproduct of the $11 million in
state-of-the-art emissions-control equipment we have installed at the
facility. Ammonia is injected into the process exhaust gas in the
presence of a catalyst. This technology has helped us reduce our
emissions by approximately 95%. The power plant is responsible for
only .2% of the total emissions in the South Coast air basin. You’re
probably not surprised to hear that the vehicles we drive are
responsible for more than 90% of our air pollution.
Thirdly, the electricity we generate is consumed in California and
not sent out of state. In fact, plants owned and operated by AES in
California are capable of producing almost 10% of the state’s peak
electricity demand.
I know there are different opinions regarding our role in the
community. I am not writing to try to convince anyone to change his
or her mind. The only thing I ask is that people form their opinions
based on an understanding of the facts. The facility is operated by a
dedicated team of 52 people, many of whom live in Huntington Beach,
and we take great pride in the service we provide.
Our children attend the local schools, we swim in the ocean, enjoy
the pier and breathe the same air you do. We do this with confidence,
knowing that we care about the communities where we operate, respect
the environment and produce a product that has become vital to our
well-being.
If anyone is interested in learning more about our facility or in
taking a plant tour, please contact us at (714) 374-1476. We would
love to show you around our home away from home.
ERIC PENDERGRAFT
General Manager
AES Huntington Beach
Tomorrow says no
to Poseidon today
To the Huntington Beach City Council:
Good news! It’s OK to vote against Poseidon!
Over the past several months, the war of words has been going full
tilt between the two sides of the desalination issue. Between the
letters to the editors and Poseidon’s public relations, both sides
have been waging a full-blown assault trying to convince you that you
should either love Poseidon or hate it.
Poseidon also comes up at a time when the whole subject of water
availability for Southern California is finally being talked about
seriously at the county, state and even federal levels. The huge
population growth of California over the past several decades,
coupled with projected future growth, requires a comprehensive plan
for the entire state as the only way to ensure water for all into the
future.
Poseidon is a technically complex project, the environmental
report for which would require a doctorate degree to fully
understand. Short of having an advanced degree in marine biology,
you, the City Council, are placed between those letters to the editor
and Poseidon’s promises. You also have the unavoidable feeling of
responsibility that Huntington Beach’s future is at stake. A sense of
stewardship is a natural part of an authority position such as yours.
Will saying no to Poseidon somehow negatively affect the quality of
life in Huntington Beach for years to come? Is Poseidon the good guy
or the bad guy?
Huntington Beach Tomorrow contends that Poseidon is not what
Huntington Beach needs -- short term or long term.
An important reason Poseidon’s environmental report should be
denied is because it does not address the community’s need for such a
facility. The Municipal Water District of Orange County said that
with conservation and recycling programs such as the Groundwater
Replenishment Program scheduled to be completed next year, this area
will have sufficient water from normal supplies for the next 25
years. The district has also said that large scale desalination makes
sense only in southern Orange County and San Diego County, where
there is no groundwater aquifer such as we sit on top of here.
Additionally, studies are proving that when desalination is
considered, the most effective means of desalination is through
groundwater wells and not directly from the ocean. This allows for a
certain amount of natural filtration to occur and eliminates problems
with ocean life entrapment and entrainment that have long plagued
AES’s ocean intake.
Poseidon has no buyer for its water and no destination for that
water has been identified. The water district has already stated that
it will not allow Poseidon -- or any other private water producer --
to connect to the local water grid without contract in hand from a
buyer. Without a buyer, why approve the plant?
Since the water district has already said it does not want or need
Poseidon’s water, would that not logically infer that Poseidon’s
water will then have significant growth-inducing characteristics
which have not been analyzed and in fact have been trivialized in the
environmental report?
By all accounts, Huntington Beach’s offshore biology is troubled.
The combined affects of urban runoff, sanitation district outfall,
Santa Ana River pollution and other as-yet-unknown problems all
contribute to this. Is it worth adding another set of variables into
that mix, such as higher salinity concentrations and higher
entrainment and impingement counts? Given the sensitivity and
potential financial impacts to Huntington Beach’s economy, how can
the experts responsibly guarantee that these additional burdens
Poseidon would make on the ocean environment not be the straws that
finally break the camel’s back?
The Orange County Sanitation District’s pipe installation along
Bushard Street has created enormous problems with numerous lawsuits
pending. Although Poseidon’s pipeline would be smaller, in many cases
it would be deeper than the sanitation district’s pipe. This
long-term construction project would be detrimental to residents with
homes adjacent to Hamilton Avenue, Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue
and poses tremendous legal exposure to the city.
Lastly, does Huntington Beach want to open up water -- a
historically public utility -- to a private, for-profit company? It
was attempted in Tampa, Fla., and that plant still hasn’t come
online. There may be differences of opinion as to why the system has
failed there, but whatever those reasons truly are, the system has,
in fact, failed. After Huntington Beach’s recent history including
the sports complex and condo conversion scandals, is it wise to run
the risk with Poseidon?
There are plenty of reasons why you, as a conscientious City
Council member, can and should say no to Poseidon. Primarily, you
should because there are regional jurisdictions that deal with water
issues on a daily basis and are better prepared to address those
issues. It is in the best short-term and long-term interest of the
city and those who live here to reject the environmental report and
conditional-use permit.
Huntington Beach Tomorrow is not anti-desalination. We are,
however, against projects that are invasive to our city and that do
not provide our city with a tangible benefit.
Please feel free to contact us with questions.
HUNTINGTON BEACH TOMORROW
David Guido, president
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