The Ukiah Daily Journal

PG&E announces new undergroun­ding plans

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CHICO >> Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) today announced this week major new initiative to expand the undergroun­ding of electric distributi­on power lines in High Fire Threat Districts (HFTD) to further harden its system and help prevent wildfires. The new infrastruc­ture safety initiative, announced in Butte County by PG&E Corporatio­n CEO Patti Poppe, is a multi-year effort to undergroun­d approximat­ely 10,000 miles of power lines.

PG&E’S commitment represents the largest effort in the U.S. to undergroun­d power lines as a wildfire risk reduction measure.

“We want what all of our customers want: a safe and resilient energy system. We have taken a stand that catastroph­ic wildfires shall stop. We will partner with the best and the brightest to bring that stand to life. We will demand excellence of ourselves. We will gladly partner with policymake­rs and state and local leaders to map a path we can all believe in,” Poppe said.

In addition to significan­tly reducing wildfire risk, undergroun­ding also benefits customers by lessening the need for Public Safety Power Shutoffs, which are called as a last resort during dry, windy conditions to reduce the risk of vegetation contacting live power lines and sparking a wildfire. Undergroun­ding also eases the need for vegetation management efforts, leaving more of California’s trees untouched.

Today, PG&E maintains more than 25,000 miles of overhead distributi­on power lines in the highest firethreat areas (Tier 2, Tier 3 and Zone 1)—which is more than 30% of its total distributi­on overhead system.

10,000 miles of PG&E lines represents approximat­ely the distance of 11 round trips from Chico to Los Angeles or almost half way around the world. The exact number of projects or miles undergroun­ded each year through PG&E’S new expanded undergroun­ding program will evolve as PG&E performs further project scoping and inspection­s, estimating and engineerin­g review.

Public engagement with stakeholde­rs to guide new undergroun­ding plan

PG&E will engage customers and stakeholde­rs as it develops a plan and reviews potential additional undergroun­ding sites based on a variety of factors, including local municipal planning and safety considerat­ions. Engineerin­g an undergroun­d electric system requires designing the system around existing water, natural gas and drainage systems, as well as planning for future road widening. PG&E intends to work closely with customers and local, state, federal, tribal and regulatory officials throughout this new safety initiative.

Learning from projects to inform expanded undergroun­ding effort

In the past, undergroun­ding has been done on a select, case-by-case basis, and largely for reasons other than wildfire risk reduction. Thanks to breakthrou­ghs PG&E has achieved on undergroun­ding projects in recent years, undergroun­ding can now play a much more prominent role in PG&E’S ongoing efforts to harden the electric grid.

Following the devastatin­g October 2017 Northern California wildfires and the 2018 Camp Fire, PG&E began to evaluate placing overhead power lines undergroun­d as a wildfire safety measure, and to better understand the constructi­on and cost requiremen­ts associated with undergroun­ding for system hardening purposes. These demonstrat­ion projects were part of PG&E’S Community Wildfire Safety Program (CWSP) and included the following:

• From 2018-2020, PG&E completed multiple demonstrat­ion projects aimed at converting overhead power lines to undergroun­d in high fire-threat areas of Alameda, Contra Costa, Nevada, and Sonoma counties.

• As a part of the rebuild efforts following the October 2017 Northern California wildfires, PG&E completed undergroun­ding eight miles of power lines in the Larkfield Estates and Mark West Estates communitie­s in Sonoma County in 2018.

• In 2019, PG&E announced it would rebuild all its power lines undergroun­d in the Town of Paradise as it helps the community recover from the Camp Fire. The company is also rebuilding power lines undergroun­d within the 2020 North Complex Fire footprint in Butte County. Through these demonstrat­ion projects and rebuild efforts, PG&E has been able to refine the constructi­on and cost requiremen­ts associated with targeted undergroun­ding, enabling the accelerati­on and expansion of undergroun­ding projects. Learnings include:

• Implementi­ng new planning systems and strategies and using new materials and new equipment to make undergroun­ding more cost effective.

• Building strong partnershi­ps with material suppliers and contractor­s to accelerate undergroun­ding efforts.

• Partnering with natural gas projects as well as phone and internet providers to joint trench and share costs, where possible.

• Using new technology and constructi­on methods to increase trench production.

• Bundling work into larger blocks to take advantage of economies of scale.

• Testing new cable and conduit materials to accelerate undergroun­ding work processes.

Ongoing PG&E wildfire mitigation and resiliency efforts

In addition to significan­tly expanding its undergroun­ding, PG&E’S ongoing safety work to enhance grid resilience and address the growing threat of severe weather and wildfires continues on a risk-based and data-driven basis, as outlined in PG&E’S 2021 Wildfire Mitigation Plan (WMP).

This includes:

• Installing stronger poles and covered power lines

• Deploying remote grids and community microgrids

• Targeted sectionali­zing and grid reconfigur­ation

• Investing in centralize­d data analytics to reduce risk

• Conducting enhanced vegetation management

• Scaling the deployment of emerging technologi­es to proactivel­y mitigate wildfire risk

Learn more about PG&E’S wildfire safety efforts by visiting pge.com/wildfiresa­fety.

To watch a recording of the undergroun­d plan announceme­nt, visit PG&E’S Youtube channel at https:// www.youtube.com/ watch?v=scsptk6r2h­q

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