Decision on AES retooling project set for Wednesday
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The California Energy Commission’s siting
committee held one last public hearing in the council chambers of City
Hall on Monday to discuss powerhouse AES Corp.’s proposal to restart a
pair of energy generators that have sat silent since 1995.
The hearing, the final one before the retooling plan appears before
the commission for a vote Wednesday, gave city and AES officials a chance
to comment on a proposal released by the committee last month.
That proposal set a five-year limit on the retooling and operation of
power generating units No. 3 and No. 4 at 21730 Newland St., where AES
already has two generators in use, as well as a smaller peaker unit used
in maximum demand periods.
“I think we’ve been very successful in bringing the best project we
can forward,” said Ed Blackford, AES president and site manager of the
Surf City plant. “But we’re against the five-year limit on certification
and if this is ultimately approved, we’ll have to take our concerns
before the full commission.”
City officials said limiting AES to a five-year permit for the
mothballed generators is at the core of its entire approach in the siting
committee process.
“We really pressed hard to protect the environment, the ocean and
beaches and feel we did that with the measures in place in the proposal,”
said Bill Workman, assistant city administrator, adding that the
committee’s proposal also requires the utility company to set aside money
to study its impact on local wildlife. “But one of the big victories are
the additional limits and controls on the peaker unit’s jet engines, as
well as the idea that AES would generate a master plan for its site so
everyone and the community can know what to expect.”
An overriding concern of the public, city and committee was the need
for assurance that any power generated by the retooled units, expected to
be about 450 megawatts and cover about 10% of the 5,000-megawatt
shortfall predicted for this summer, should stay in California.
AES officials said they are in negotiations with the state’s
Department of Water Resources over that very subject, but that the
five-year permit limit could hamper those talks.
Labor union officials also attacked AES on Monday, berating the power
company for using out-of-state workers instead of local laborers.
Blackford said that 50% of the labor pool for the retooling project
would consist of Californians, with 30% of that work force staffed by
Orange County natives.
FYI
For more information on the AES Corp. retooling project, residents can
visit o7 https://www.energy.ca.gov/sitingcases/huntingtonbeach/f7 on
the Web or call (916) 654-4489 for project manager Jack W. Caswell at the
Energy Facilities Siting and Environmental Protection Division of the
California Energy Commission.
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