California Coastkeeper Alliance v. State Lands Commission

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 7, 2021
DocketC088922
StatusPublished

This text of California Coastkeeper Alliance v. State Lands Commission (California Coastkeeper Alliance v. State Lands Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Coastkeeper Alliance v. State Lands Commission, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/8/21 Certified for Publication 5/7/21 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

CALIFORNIA COASTKEEPER ALLIANCE et al., C088922

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 34201780002736) v.

STATE LANDS COMMISSION,

Defendant and Respondent.

POSEIDON RESOURCES (SURFSIDE) LLC,

Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

For a number of years, real party in interest Poseidon Resources (Surfside) LLC (Poseidon) has planned to establish a desalination plant at a site in Huntington Beach. In 2010, nonparty City of Huntington Beach (Huntington Beach), serving as lead agency performing environmental review of the proposed project pursuant to the California

1 Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources Code, § 21000 et seq.), certified a subsequent environmental impact report (the 2010 subsequent EIR).1 However, the project did not move forward. Following changes in circumstances including significant regulatory changes, Poseidon proposed modifications to the project, which it addressed in a proposed lease modification with defendant California’s State Lands Commission (Lands Commission). The Lands Commission determined that it needed to prepare a supplemental EIR to supplement Huntington Beach’s 2010 subsequent EIR. In 2017, the Lands Commission certified its final supplemental EIR. Plaintiffs filed a petition for a writ of mandate asserting, among other things, that the Lands Commission failed to comply with the requirements of CEQA. The trial court denied the petition. The parties sharply dispute the framing of the issues presented on appeal and whether the applicable standard of review is de novo review or review for substantial evidence. Plaintiffs assert the Lands Commission prejudicially abused its discretion by (1) failing to assume the role of CEQA lead agency and perform the attendant obligations, and (2) unlawfully piecemealing/segmenting its environmental review in several respects, matters addressed to whether the Lands Commission failed to proceed in a manner authorized by CEQA, subject to de novo review. The Lands Commission and Poseidon assert that the true issues on appeal are whether the Lands Commission properly proceeded with supplemental review and the results of that review, factual matters subject to substantial evidence review. Both standards of review will be implicated here. We conclude that the Lands Commission properly elected to prepare a supplemental EIR, did not err in refusing to assume lead agency status, and did not unlawfully piecemeal or segment environmental review.

1 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Public Resources Code.

2 We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Project Site and Lease Amendment The subject site consists of approximately 11.78 acres including tide and submerged lands in the Pacific Ocean offshore of Huntington Beach. In 1957, the Lands Commission2 authorized a 49-year lease to Southern California Edison for the construction of pipelines for a “once-through” cooling system.3 In 1998, the Lands Commission approved the assignment of the lease from Southern California Edison to AES Huntington Beach, LLC (AES). The Lands Commission subsequently authorized the lease with AES to span a 20-year term, expiring on August 7, 2026. Project Background Poseidon has been seeking to establish a desalination plant on the subject site since 1999. The purpose of the proposed project is to provide Orange County with a “long-term, reliable, high-quality, and local source of potable water.” “Project implementation would create a local drought-proof supply of domestic water and could reduce Orange County’s dependence on imported water, consistent with the goal of integrated water resource management.”

2 The Lands Commission “has exclusive jurisdiction over all ungranted tidelands and submerged lands owned by the State, and of the beds of navigable rivers, streams, lakes, bays, estuaries, inlets, and straits, including tidelands and submerged lands or any interest therein, whether within or beyond the boundaries of the State as established by law . . . . All jurisdiction and authority remaining in the State as to tidelands and submerged lands as to which grants have been or may be made is vested in the commission. [¶] The commission shall exclusively administer and control all such lands, and may lease or otherwise dispose of such lands, as provided by law, upon such terms and for such consideration, if any, as are determined by it.” (§ 6301.) 3 The once-through cooling system draws seawater from the Pacific Ocean through an intake pipeline, circulates the seawater through the upland generating station for cooling purposes, and then discharges the seawater back into the ocean.

3 Poseidon applied to Huntington Beach to obtain land use approvals to construct and operate a desalination facility. The proposed desalination plant would have the capacity to deliver approximately 50 million gallons per day of reverse osmosis desalinated water. The desalinated water would be distributed to Huntington Beach and various cities and local water districts for use and consumption by Orange County residents and businesses. Originally, the desalination plant was to obtain source seawater from the adjacent AES Huntington Beach Generating Station (HBGS). According to the 2010 subsequent EIR prepared by Huntington Beach as lead agency, the “source water for the proposed seawater desalination facility will be taken from the existing HBGS condenser cooling- seawater discharge pipeline system after the water has been used by HBGS for cooling. However, if in the future HBGS were to cease the use of once-through cooling, or if the HBGS were to permanently alter its cooling water system’s historical operations, the proposed seawater desalination facility would intake water directly from the Pacific Ocean via the existing HBGS intake pipe. In either case, and in order to protect the marine environment, 50 [million gallons per day] of concentrated seawater would reenter the Pacific Ocean via the existing HBGS discharge pipe after blending with additional intake water to be used for dilution.” Thus, according to the 2010 subsequent EIR, “[a] key advantage of the selected site is to utilize existing ocean intake/discharge lines of sufficient seawater volume to avoid the impact of constructing new ocean intake/discharge facilities.” In addition to the desalination plant itself, the project as proposed in 2010 “also consists of the construction and operations of off-site improvements, including water delivery pipeline (new pipeline and/or replacement of portions of existing pipeline) underground booster pump stations, and modifications to an existing booster pump station, all of which will be utilized by [Poseidon] to deliver desalinated seawater to Orange County retail water purveyors.”

4 2005 EIR and 2010 Subsequent EIR In 2005, Huntington Beach as lead agency certified an EIR. In 2006, Huntington Beach granted the project’s conditional use permit and coastal development permit. However, the project was not built. Subsequently, Poseidon submitted a modified application to Huntington Beach, and Huntington Beach evaluated co-located, stand-alone operations and onshore facility and distribution pipeline revisions. Huntington Beach, as lead agency, prepared a subsequent EIR in 2010 as a result of changed circumstances and the development of new information. Huntington Beach certified the subsequent EIR in September 2010. Thereafter, no legal challenges were made to the 2010 subsequent EIR. Once again, however, the project did not move forward. And, again, circumstances changed, including regulatory changes.

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Bluebook (online)
California Coastkeeper Alliance v. State Lands Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-coastkeeper-alliance-v-state-lands-commission-calctapp-2021.