Los Angeles Times

Edison unveils its plan to help prevent wildfires

Utility would remove trees and preemptive­ly cut power

- By Sammy Roth

California’s second-largest power company plans to cut down tens of thousands of trees in high-risk areas, inspect thousands of miles of power lines and consider the use of preemptive power shutoffs this year, part of a $582-million plan to reduce the risk of fires sparked by the utility’s infrastruc­ture.

Southern California Edison submitted a wildfire mitigation plan to the California Public Utilities Commission on Wednesday, as required by Senate Bill 901, which was passed by the Legislatur­e last year.

Although the Rosemead-based utility doesn’t face the same level of fire liability as Pacific Gas & Electric — which filed for bankruptcy protection last week — Edison’s electrical equipment may have ignited the Woolsey fire, which killed four people and burned nearly 100,000 acres in Los Angeles and Ventura counties last year.

Edison already asked the Public Utilities Commission in September for permission to charge ratepayers for $582 million worth of fire-prevention projects,

such as insulating exposed wires that could spark blazes, building more weather stations to better forecast fire risks and deploying infrared cameras to monitor equipment. The mitigation plan provides more details about what Edison expects to do this year.

The company plans to inspect at least 125,000 trees in high-risk areas that could topple into power lines, on top of its existing plans to remove or trim 7,500 potentiall­y hazardous trees this year. The company also plans to inspect all 19,000 miles of power lines it operates in high fire-risk areas, with a more rigorous protocol than in past years, said Phil Herrington, Edison’s

senior vice president of transmissi­on and distributi­on.

“We’re targeting having these inspection­s wrapped up by summertime,” he said.

Preemptive electricit­y shutoffs are also part of Edison’s strategy.

By de-energizing power lines during dry, windy conditions, utilities can dramatical­ly reduce the odds of their infrastruc­ture igniting fires. But Edison and PG&E have rarely taken that step, which can anger local communitie­s despite the potentiall­y enormous benefits.

PG&E canceled a planned power shutoff in the Paradise area just before the Camp fire broke out in November, and Edison is being sued by victims of the

Woolsey fire who say the utility company should have deenergize­d power lines on the dry, windy day the deadly fire started.

At least in Southern California, preemptive power shutoffs may become more common. Although the company’s criteria for de-energizing lines won’t change, Herrington said the 850 weather stations and 160 high-definition cameras Edison hopes to deploy by 2020 “could easily result in more exercising” of preemptive shutoffs.

“We have much more informatio­n to make that decision,” he said.

Pacific Gas & Electric and San Diego Gas & Electric also filed wildfire mitigation plans late Wednesday.

SDG&E has won praise over the last decade for its fire prevention efforts, including the installati­on of more than 175 weather monitoring stations and a greater willingnes­s to shut off power preemptive­ly.

But PG&E has faced mounting criticism. State officials say the San Francisco-based company’s infrastruc­ture ignited or contribute­d to more than a dozen fires that killed 22 people in 2017. Cal Fire has yet to determine whether PG&E is responsibl­e for the Camp fire, which killed 86 people and destroyed most of the town of Paradise.

William Alsup, a federal judge overseeing PG&E’s criminal probation stemming

from a 2010 gas explosion that killed eight people in San Bruno, said last month that he may order PG&E to inspect its entire electric grid and do extensive tree-trimming before this summer.

PG&E said that could cost as much as $150 billion. Alsup said he would wait for PG&E to file its wildfire mitigation plan before deciding whether to finalize his order.

In its wildfire mitigation plan, PG&E said its plans this year include removing about 375,000 trees and installing 400 new weather stations.

The company also said it is “significan­tly expanding” its preemptive electricit­y shutoff program and reevaluati­ng

the criteria it uses to make the decision to de-energize power lines.

The three investorow­ned utilities have already begun many of the initiative­s outlined in their mitigation plans, but they’ll need approval from the Public Utilities Commission to pass along any of the costs to ratepayers.

Senate Bill 901, the legislatio­n that required the fire prevention plans, also made it easier for Edison, PG&E and SDG&E, to pass on the costs of some utility-ignited blazes to their customers. But those cost-recovery provisions didn’t include the 2018 fires, which was one of the factors that led PG&E to file for bankruptcy last month.

 ?? Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty Images ?? SOUTHERN California Edison crews assess damage in 2016 after the Erskine fire in Kern County. The utility asked the PUC in September for permission to charge ratepayers for $582 million of fire-prevention projects.
Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty Images SOUTHERN California Edison crews assess damage in 2016 after the Erskine fire in Kern County. The utility asked the PUC in September for permission to charge ratepayers for $582 million of fire-prevention projects.
 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? AMONG steps Edison might take is to preemptive­ly shut off electricit­y, a move it has rarely made because of the risk of angering customers.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times AMONG steps Edison might take is to preemptive­ly shut off electricit­y, a move it has rarely made because of the risk of angering customers.

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