OLD ENCINA POWER STATION CHIMNEY PRESERVATION
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Encina Power Station 
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The Encina Power Station (EPS) is a large natural gas and oil-fueled electricity generating plant located in Carlsbad, California, in San Diego County. Constructed in 1954, it is one of the major suppliers of electricity for the region as well as one of the region's oldest. The plant is owned by NRG Energy. EPS sits on the southern shore of the outer segment of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon; once a stinking pool at low tide, it was opened to a continuous tidal flow to create a cooling system that was constructed along with the plant. Now home to blue herons, ibises, and a multitude of aquatic life, the lagoon is attached to the ocean and other waterways through rising tide levels and various small creeks. The lagoon serves as EPS' source for its once-through cooling and is also owned by NRG Energy.​
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Should the smokestack be removed as NRG and the City of Carlsbad have agreed upon, demolition will begin in April of 2020. Nonetheless, an industrial site will largely remain. The Carlsbad Energy Center being built behind the present location of the Encina Power Plant will add two new smokestacks with solely an industrial purpose. Each smokestack will tower over 100 feet tall and add something the citizens of Carlsbad will have no choice in beautifying. One smokestack with a historic past and a potential for a brilliant future will be replaced by two 10 story towers to serve the new power plant. Meanwhile neither the City of Carlsbad nor NRG have any concrete plans in place for what will happen after plant is destroyed. Any hopes for the land could also be achieved while maintaining a Carlsbad landmark.
The new power plant does not require ocean water cooling and while creating a plant more efficient than the Encina Plant made over 65 years ago seems inevitable, the Carlsbad Energy Center will still use gas turbines. Regardless of their structure, gas turbine peaking plants, are not sustainable and introduce pollutants that contribute to climate change. NRG meets the minimum of the California Clean Energy standards and nothing more. Even so, this represents only a 30% increase of efficiency from Encina Power Plant commissioned in 1954 and expanded in the 1970s.² Furthermore, the natural gas plant which will replace our older natural gas plant will continue to contribute to drilling, extracting and transporting the gas. This inevitably results in methane leaking into the environment, a pollutant 34 times stronger than CO2 at trapping heat over a 100-year period and 86 times stronger over 20 years.³ Elsewhere cities are making innovations and earning tax incentives with hydropower, geothermal energy, solar energy and wind power. 

Certainly aware of this inevitability, fellow Carlsbad concerned citizens of the grass roots organization “Power of Vision,” circa 2011, courageously fought to prevent the new power plant from being built on our coast. We respect their work and sympathize with any frustrations at the approval of the new plant. Preservation of the Chimney is not meant to diminish their vailian efforts. Their fight marked one of the important and remarkable chapters in the history of the power plant and chimney tower. Through quality organization and persistence they fought for the rest of us in Carlsbad but lost to a seemingly unbeatable foe. In conjunction, some commendable Carlsbad elected officials and staff vigorously opposed placing the new industrial power plant on the coast. As a historic landmark the Chimney tower would honor their contributions.

Building the tower integral to the City of Carlsbad's incorporation and future development did not come without a cost. We would also hope to commemorate the lives lost as the structure expanded into a monument of industry in the 1970s. The decommissioned smokestack now serves only as symbol of the City. A transformation can acknowledge its past and look forward to the future of Carlsbad.  
See the story below that recalls the tragedy on October 2, 1976.
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Agua Hedionda Lagoon – History
 

For tens of thousands of years a complex of coastal wetlands extending from Santa Barbara to San Diego has been part of the Pacific Flyway, one of four continental routes where migratory water birds and shorebirds have taken wing from breeding grounds in northern latitudes to southern wintering grounds.
 
The lagoons of North San Diego County estuarine complex are composed of vegetated salt marshes, unvegetated salt and mud flats, and subtidal waters. The southern portion of the complex extends southward from Oceanside to Ensenada has been inhabited by the first peoples of the New World for thousands of years. At the time of the first contact with the Spanish, the native population in San Diego County was estimated to be about 30,000, made up of five major tribes, the Luiseno, Cahuilla, Cupeno, Kumeyaay, and Diegueño. These peoples lived in semi-permanent villages, foraging for shellfish, seaweeds, as well as fishing, and hunting small game.
 
When the Spaniards began establishing ranches, farms and missions, they brought non-native plants, horses, cattle, goats, sheep, pigs and chickens. These invasive plants and livestock began to degrade native ecosystem systems. Prior to Spanish colonization, the Agua Hedionda Lagoon was a healthy coastal estuary. Livestock runoff flowing into the lagoon’s eroded its long-standing circulation with the Pacific Ocean. The lagoon’s character changed and original Spanish name given to the lagoon, “San Simon Lipnica,” was changed to “Agua Hedionda,” which translates to stinking, pestilent waters. The lagoon has been transformed into a silty, shallow breeding ground for mosquitoes and mud flat. The once verdant marsh reeds and clear lagoon waters teeming with wildlife had become a stagnant pool, clogged with thick algal blooms. The wildlife fish and shellfish that native peoples had relied on for centuries were decimated and lands degraded to where native peoples no longer could continue their traditional way of life.
 
Successive waves of land owners continued to transform the California’s southern coastal landscape, bringing more waves of new settlers, roads, and eventually the railroad in 1885. Soon the town of Carlsbad was founded in 1887, and grew from a Santé Fe Railroad whistle stop, to eventually become an attractive, seaside destination. In 1952 Carlsbad was incorporated as a city to avoid annexation by Oceanside.
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Painting: Acrylic on canvas by Owen Martucci -- ​owenmartucci.com
The Encina Power Station – Playing a Part in Agua Hedionda, Ecological Preservation, and Carlsbad History

​After Carlsbad’s corporation as a city, San Diego Gas and Electric purchased the Agua Hedionda Lagoon and surrounding lands for the purpose of restoring the lagoon’s connection with the Pacific and using seawater to cool its electrical power generators that were being built to serve Carlsbad’s rapidly growing population.

The lagoon was dredged in 1952, permanently reopening ocean circulation to supply cooling waters for SDG&E’s Power Plant, built on the south side of the lagoon. Sand from littoral drift enters the lagoon at the rate of more than 100,000 cubic yards per year and has been removed at two-year intervals to maintain the cooling water basin of the outer lagoon.
 
Agua Hedionda Lagoon, a shallow pool closed to the Pacific at low tide since early European settlement, was dredged and reopened to a continuous tidal flow to cool SDG&E’s Encina Power Station, constructed in 1954. Lagoon health improved and the impaired body of water became home to Great Blue herons, Brown Pelicans, Ibises, Snowy Egrets, Western Grebes, Double-crested Cormorants, Ospreys, and many other species of birds, Coyote, Fox, Bobcats, Rabbits and other mammals, amphibians, lizards and snakes, Olympia Oysters, Rock Scallops, Clams, Cockles, Sea Stars, Sea Urchins and host marine invertebrates. Other wild visitors to the restored lagoon include Dolphins, Harbor Seals, Sea Lions and Sea Turtles.
 
After Agua Hedionda Lagoon’s circulation was restored, scientists from San Diego State University, later joined by shellfish farmers, began growing shellfish in the lagoon. Since then billions of shellfish have been grown in the lagoon, filtering its waters, keeping the waters healthy and clear, allowing the lagoon’s Eelgrass beds to expand and its amazing diversity of wildlife to recover and flourish.
 
Shellfish aquaculture in the City of Carlsbad‘s Agua Hedionda Lagoon began as a California Sea Grant research project by San Diego State University in the 1960’s. Their research determined which shellfish species were best suited to grow in the lagoon, which, at the time had been reconnected with the Pacific Ocean. Their research concluded the lagoon was ideal for growing shellfish and that the lagoon’s long-term health would benefit from the biofiltration eco-services provided by millions of shellfish. Soon thereafter the scientists joined forces with shellfish farmers to establish the Carlsbad Aquafarm and start growing shellfish.
 
Carlsbad Aquafarm is grateful for the support it receives from NRG Energy, which owns and operates the Encina Power Station and provides stewardship of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon. NRG has long recognized the ecological importance of the Carlsbad Aquafarm and its brand value to Carlsbad as a “Working Waterfront” and place people earn a living by sustainably working in harmony with the sea.
 
Aquaculture research has continued for over 60 years and now includes the USC’s Wrigley Marine Labs (Selective breeding of Pacific Oysters for resiliency in a changing ocean), San Diego State University, Aquaculture Training), UCSD, SIO and Southern California Coast Ocean Observatory (Ocean Acidification), California State University Fullerton (Living Shoreline Restoration with Native Oysters Eelgrass) and the UC Davis Bodega Marine Lab (Abalone Research and Population Restoration). Agua Hedionda Lagoon Commercial Aquaculture is celebrating its 50th Anniversary. However, harvesting shellfish in the area began over 13,500 years ago when the New World’s first people made their maiden journey down the west coast, fishing, and beach-combing for shellfish in the region’s coastal lagoon.
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Forever Carlsbad.
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"Even though I am not a Californian, I hope the Carlsbad CA, smokestack stays, for it is an iconic historical landmark, for Carlsbad CA, and it can be seen from sea, land, and air. It is also a testimony to the past, of the hard work, that past generations built, in American architecture heritage. We cannot lose old architecture heritage, for future unborn generations, need to see, what America has built, in the past, whether it be cars, houses, that smokestack, and so on. As a West Texan, who proudly lives in Carlsbad, Texas, our smokestack (which is a smaller smokestack, leveling out at 110 to 130 ft) has been in place, since the 1920s at the San Angelo State Supported Living Center, mental health facility, in Carlsbad, Texas. Our stack is an icon, and when I see our smokestack from Hwy 87, or from the sky, I know home is close by, and that is a good feeling. Keep fighting for your/our American architecture heritage."
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Sincerely/Respectfully, JD

Carlsbad, Texas
  • Home
  • A Storied History
    • Historical Landmark Status
  • Worldwide Chimney Preservation
    • Tate Modern
    • The Toffee Factory
    • Haffenreffer Chimney Restoration
    • Chemintz Smokestack
    • Spartanburg Mills
    • Tulip Tower, Mt. Vernon
    • The Forks
    • Turku Power Station
  • Endless Possibilities
  • How To Help
  • Share Your Thoughts For the Future: Our Blog