Las Vegas Review-Journal

PG&E looks at ways it could keep blazes at bay

Utility will start shutting off power in some cases

- The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s Pacific Gas & Electric Co. will start switching off power to minimize sparks in vulnerable areas during times of extreme fire danger, it said Thursday, as state investigat­ors examine whether the utility’s equipment set off deadly Northern California wildfires.

The move for pre-emptive power cutoffs is one that some local officials and fire survivors have urged after recent wildfires. PG&E and some other state utilities previously have resisted it, arguing that cutting off power carries its own risks, including to patients dependent on electrical equipment.

The change was one of a slate announced Thursday by the utility in the aftermath of Northern California wildfires that killed 44 people last October, and have left the utility facing what could be hundreds of millions of dollars — or even more — in liability.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection still is investigat­ing the causes of the spate of October wildfires. Records released so far in the probe show that tree limbs or whole trees fell into power lines in the areas where many of the near-simultaneo­us fires began, whipped up by fierce, dry winds.

PG&E is now drafting guidelines for shutting down power in areas at risk during extreme fire danger, spokesman Matt Nauman said. Any temporary shut-offs would likely happen during California’s summer and fall fire season, and would be done in coordinati­on with officials and with public notice, Nauman said.

“Turning off electric power lines can have an immediate and broad impact on public safety,” Nauman said. “At the same time, we recognize that there may be situations in which proactivel­y turning off electric power lines is warranted.”

State utility regulators held at least one public hearing earlier this year studying the usefulness of shutting power to select areas during times of high winds and parched brush and grass.

San Diego Gas & Electric in Southern California cut off about 12,000 customers during high winds and wildfires last December, only to have some customers complain, that utility said.

PG&E also will talk with communitie­s to determine where it makes sense to bury power lines undergroun­d rather than run them above ground on poles, Nauman said.

Even buried lines are vulnerable to weather damage, quakes, flooding and unwitting damage from heavy equipment, PG&E officials say.

The utility also plans to make its electrical system more resilient against high winds and fire, including replacing some wooden poles with steel.

Other planned changes include an around-the-clock wildfire prediction and response center in San Francisco, and the hiring of firefighte­rs on retainer.

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