Los Angeles Times

Sempra CEO to step down

A ‘trailblaze­r,’ Debra Reed is among the few women running a major corporatio­n.

- By Rob Nikolewski Nikolewski writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Just days after Sempra Energy wrapped up the largest acquisitio­n in the company’s history, Debra Reed announced Monday that she will be stepping down as president and chief executive of the San Diego company.

Reed, 61, who has led Sempra since 2011, is one of the few women running a major corporatio­n and one of the few women at the top of a major energy company.

“She’s had a tremendous career and she has been a trailblaze­r for women at the top of electric utilities in the United States,” said Gary Ackerman, executive director of the Western Power Trading Forum, an organizati­on in Sacramento whose 90 members in the West buy and sell power.

Sempra’s board of directors elected finance chief Jeff Martin to assume Reed’s CEO role and Joseph Householde­r, group president of infrastruc­ture businesses, to take over as president.

Reed will retain her CEO and president duties until May 1 and will stay on until Dec. 1, serving as Sempra Energy’s executive chairwoman. She did not give a reason for her retirement but in a statement Monday morning alluded to having spent 40 years “in the Sempra Energy family of companies.”

Late last week, Sempra completed the final steps to acquire Oncor, the largest utility in Texas, for $9.45 billion. The transactio­n greatly expands Sempra’s reach into one of the biggest energy markets in North America and, with subsidiari­es San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Gas, creates a utility holding company with the largest customer base in the U.S.

Sempra also has assets in Mexico and South America and, along with internatio­nal partners, is building a liquefied natural gas facility in Louisiana and has plans to build another in Port Arthur, Texas.

Reed started with SoCalGas in 1978, shortly after graduating from USC with a degree in civil engineerin­g. Within 10 years, she became the company’s first female officer. Reed assisted in the $6.2-billion merger that created Sempra in 1998.

Under Reed, Sempra Energy’s market value more than doubled, reaching nearly $29 billion. According to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Reed’s salary in 2016 was $1.39 million and she received a $1.83-million bonus. With restricted stock that vested in 2016, Reed’s compensati­on was $16.66 million.

In 2015, the largest methane leak from a natural gas storage facility in U.S. history occurred at the Aliso Canyon site operated by SoCalGas. The leak led to the evacuation of thousands of residents in the Porter Ranch subdivisio­n in L.A.

In 2007, deadly wildfires broke out in San Diego County that killed two people, injured 40 firefighte­rs and forced tens of thousands to seek shelter at Qualcomm Stadium. Investigat­ions showed that the fires started when power lines ignited nearby brush.

The California Public Utilities Commission last November rejected a request from SDG&E to pass on to ratepayers $379 million in costs related to the fires, agreeing with a pair of administra­tive law judges at the commission who concluded SDG&E did not reasonably manage and operate its facilities.

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