Following three contentious hearings, the Santa Ana, California, Regional Water Quality Board on Aug. 7 postponed a key vote for a proposed water desalination plant in Huntington Beach.
It was the latest in a series of bureaucratic delays for the politically sensitive desalination plant and its developer, Poseidon Resources.
The postponement comes after hundreds of people made public comments before the board during the July 30, July 31, and Aug. 7 hearings. The panel postponed the decision until September, saying it’s better to extend the process than overlook something pertinent.
“We want to be sure we make the best possible decision,” said Chairman William Ruh.
The proposal has sparked controversy among Orange County activists, environmental groups, and proponents of the $1.4 billion project for nearly two decades. Advocates say the desalination plant will provide a reliable, drought-proof, locally controlled source of water, while opponents have raised concerns about the expense of the project, the cost of the water, and the plant’s effect on the environment.
“It will be just as big of a hurdle,” John Kennedy, an executive director of the Orange County Water District (OCWD), told The Epoch Times. “The Coastal Commission has their own statutory requirements. I don’t think it will be easy.”
The estimated cost of the desalinated water would be $2,266 per acre-foot by 2023, according to Kennedy, but a possible $465 per acre-foot subsidy from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California could reduce the net cost per acre-foot to around $1,800. Bottom line, the plant could reduce the demand for imported water by half, according to Kennedy.
According to the Huntington Beach Water Desalination Facility, if the project receives all of the required permits, Orange County could be using the plant as a source of drinking water by 2025. If finally approved, building the plant would create an estimated 3,000 new construction jobs in the community.