The Mercury News

Utility to pay $2B settlement in deadly 2018 fire

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LOS ANGELES >> Southern California Edison will pay $2.2 billion to settle insurance claims from a deadly, destructiv­e wildfire sparked by its equipment in 2018, the utility announced Monday.

Edison, which acknowledg­ed no wrongdoing, said the agreement covers all claims in pending lawsuits from insurance companies related to the

Woolsey fire, which blackened 151 square miles (391 square kilometers) of Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Three people died in the November 2018 fire, and more than 1,600 homes and other buildings were destroyed.

In addition, Edison said it has finalized settlement­s from the December 2017 Thomas fire and mudslides a month later on land that burned.

“We have made another significan­t step toward resolving pending wildfirere­lated litigation,” Edison CEO Pedro Pizarro said in the statement.

Total expected losses for the 2017 and 2018 events are estimated to be $4.6 billion, the utility statement said.

“The settlement was fair to all and consistent with prior cases against Edison and other utilities,” Craig Simon, co-lead counsel for the insurance companies, said in a statement to the Ventura County Star.

Investigat­ions determined Edison equipment sparked both the Woolsey and Thomas fires. In recent years, utility equipment has been blamed for multiple wildfires across the state.

The state’s largest utility, Pacific Gas & Electric, was forced into bankruptcy in 2019 after facing liability for devastatin­g blazes in Northern California.

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