The Korea Times

CEO exits as PG&E faces bankruptcy preparatio­ns

-

PG&E PGC.N Chief Executive Geisha Williams has stepped down, the company said on Sunday, as pressure from potentiall­y crushing liabilitie­s linked to catastroph­ic wildfires have pushed the California utility owner to the financial brink and prompted it to make bankruptcy preparatio­ns.

Williams, who took the helm of the provider of electricit­y and natural gas to millions of customers in March 2017, will be replaced by General Counsel John Simon on an interim basis, the company said. She also resigned from the boards of both PG&E and its utility subsidiary, Pacific Gas and Electric.

“While we are making progress as a company in safety and other areas, the Board recognizes the tremendous challenges PG&E continues to face. We believe John is the right interim leader for the company,” PG&E Chairman Richard Kelly said in a statement.

“Our search is focused on extensive operationa­l and safety expertise, and the board is committed to further change at PG&E.”

PG&E is reeling from the November Camp fire that began in the California mountain community of Paradise and swept through the town, eventually killing at least 86 people in the deadliest and most destructiv­e blaze in state history.

The company faces widespread litigation, government investigat­ions and liabilitie­s that could potentiall­y reach $30 billion, according to analyst estimates, when accounting for the carnage and damage from last year’s fire and blazes in 2017.

The company is under pressure from the California Public Utilities Commission to make operationa­l changes. The power provider announced on Jan. 3 that it was reviewing its structural options and looking for new directors with safety experience.

The management shake-up comes as PG&E is in discussion­s with banks for a multibilli­on-dollar bankruptcy financing package to aid operations during bankruptcy proceeding­s and the company prepares to alert employees as soon as Monday to its preparatio­ns for a potential Chapter 11 court filing, people familiar with the matter said.

PG&E, which carries a hefty debt load of more than $18 billion, is expected to disclose soon a large financial charge related to liabilitie­s resulting from the November blaze.

The employee-notificati­on plans are not yet finalized and a communicat­ion could come later, the sources said. State law requires PG&E to notify employees at least 15 days before any bankruptcy filing.

For PG&E, a bankruptcy filing would represent a last resort if the company is unable to get government relief that would allow it to pass on liabilitie­s to customers, a maneuver enacted into law to help the company grapple with 2017 fires, the sources added. California lawmakers have not yet moved to pass legislatio­n that would give PG&E similar flexibilit­y for the 2018 blazes.

California Governor Gavin Newsom said last week he was having discussion­s with PG&E executives, and that he wanted a healthy utility investing in environmen­tally friendly strategies.

“That’s in an ideal world,” he said. “That’s not the case today.”

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 Camp fire in Northern California.

 ??  ?? Geisha Williams
Geisha Williams

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic