Wildfires leave PG&E at loss
PG&E Corp., the owner of the biggest US power utility by number of customers, said on Monday it is preparing to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for all of its businesses as it faces potentially crushing liabilities linked to catastrophic wildfires in 2017 and 2018. The company’s shares tumbled 55% in early trading. PG&E faces widespread litigation, government investigations and liabilities that could potentially reach $30 billion, according to the company, accounting for damage from fires last year and in 2017.
PG&E said it planned to file for bankruptcy protection around January 29, and was giving a 15-day notice to employees in order to comply with California law.
PG&E said on Sunday its chief executive was leaving and being replaced by general counsel John Simon on an interim basis.
The utility holding company said the bankruptcy process will not impact to electric or natural gas services for 16 million customers.
PG&E is reeling from the November Camp fire that swept through the California mountain community of Paradise and killed at least 86 people in the deadliest and most destructive blaze in state history. PG&E said in November it could face “significant liability” in excess of its insurance coverage if its equipment was found to have caused the fire.
The state could find PG&E responsible for the 2018 wildfires. Under California law, utilities are exposed to liability from wildfires regardless of their negligence.
The company decided to file for bankruptcy in part to address that issue, known as “inverse condemnation,” and questioned in its regulatory filing whether it could continue to operate in the years ahead as a private company exposed to that risk. A federal judge has also been putting restrictions on PG&E to shut down unsafe power lines.
Energy companies that supply PG&E could be hit by its bankruptcy. One of the most exposed is Kinder Morgan Inc , the second largest North American pipeline operator, analysts said.
The company’s board decided to oust CEO Geisha Williams and undergo a restructuring, at a meeting this weekend in San Francisco, according to a source familiar with the matter.
Faced with liabilities from wildfires and a host of related issues, PG&E’s board felt the company had no choice but to seek bankruptcy protection, according to two people familiar with the deliberations.
The legal requirement to alert employees ahead of bankruptcy filing accelerated the board’s decision. PG&E, which drew down remaining amounts on credit lines totaling $3.3b. in November, had about $1.5b. of liquidity as of Friday. A notice to employees about a pending bankruptcy could potentially dry up PG&E’s access to capital. (Reuters)