Los Angeles Times

PG& E warns of possible shut- offs

Utility may cut power to 97,000 customers in 15 counties to reduce fire danger.

- By Luke Money Times staff writer Maura Dolan contribute­d to this report.

The utility may cut power to nearly 97,000 customers in Northern California this weekend amid dry, hot and windy conditions.

Pacific Gas & Electric may cut power to nearly 97,000 customers in 15 counties this weekend as dry, unseasonab­ly hot conditions and strong winds are expected to greatly increase f ire danger across much of Northern California.

Utility officials said that a “public safety power shutoff ” could be necessary as “hot and dry conditions, combined with expected high wind gusts, pose an increased risk for damage to the electric system that has the potential to ignite fires in areas with dry vegetation.”

The “potentiall­y strong and dry offshore wind event” is expected to start early Sunday and last through Monday, according to PG& E.

As a result, the utility said outages may become necessary in parts of Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, El Dorado, Kern, Lake, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Tehama and Yuba counties.

PG& E previously said potential outages were expected to affect only about 21,000 customers in parts of Butte, Plumas and Yuba counties, but greatly expanded that “based on updated weather forecasts that showed stronger wind gusts in a larger portion” of its service area, according to a statement issued late Friday.

Red f lag warnings are now in effect for much of Northern California from 9 p. m. Saturday through early Monday. The warning covers from just above

Redding southeast into the Sierra foothills, parts of the Sacramento Valley, and areas in and around the San Francisco Bay Area, including the North Bay mountains, East Bay hills and interior valleys.

David Sweet, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard, previously said that a large area of high pressure covering almost the entire West Coast is expected to build over the weekend. Temperatur­es could climb 10 to 20 degrees above normal in some areas.

Officials said the forecast conditions — which include sustained winds, low humidity and summer- like temperatur­es — will make it easier for f ires to both start and spread.

That’s unwelcome news in an area of the state where crews are still working to contain some of the largest wildfires in California history.

Those include the North Complex f ire northeast of Oroville — which has burned more than 304,000 acres and has become one of the deadliest and most destructiv­e in the state’s history. Containmen­t on that blaze is at 78%.

The mammoth August Complex f ire has charred a state- record 867,000- plus acres in and around the Mendocino, Shasta- Trinity and Six Rivers national forests, southwest of Redding. That blaze was 38% contained as of Friday morning.

While many of the blazes in this year’s unpreceden­ted f ire season are believed to have been sparked by lightning, recent years have seen power equipment ignite some of California’s most devastatin­g blazes — including the 2018 Camp f ire that destroyed nearly 14,000 homes and killed 85 people.

PG& E implemente­d widespread power shut- offs — affecting roughly 172,000 customers in 22 counties — earlier this month on account of severe wind.

Officials said Thursday that the utility later found more than 80 instances of damage or hazards on power lines that were de- energized from Sept. 7 to 10 and that “any of these could have potentiall­y led to a wildfire had the lines not been turned off.”

“We have worked diligently to improve public safety power shut- offs by integratin­g enhanced weather technology, boosting our coordinati­on with counties and state agencies and making sure customers get timely and accurate informatio­n,” PG& E interim President Michael Lewis said in a statement.

“Still, we know turning off the power represents a significan­t hardship for our customers. Please know that we don’t take this decision lightly, and we will only initiate a [ power shut- off] as an option of last resort when severe weather that could cause a wildfire makes it absolutely necessary for public safety.”

 ?? Noah Berger Associated Press ?? A PG& E worker clears a power line blocking a roadway in Napa County. The utility says more shut- offs may be coming in 15 Northern California counties.
Noah Berger Associated Press A PG& E worker clears a power line blocking a roadway in Napa County. The utility says more shut- offs may be coming in 15 Northern California counties.

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