Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Utility seeks bankruptcy protection over Calif. fires

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SAN FRANCISCO — The nation’s largest utility said Monday it is filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy because it faces at least $30 billion in potential damages from lawsuits over wildfires in California in 2017 and 2018 that killed scores of people and destroyed thousands of homes.

The move by Pacific Gas & Electric Corp. would be the biggest bankruptcy by a utility in U.S. history, legal experts said.

It would allow PG&E to hold off creditors and continue providing electricit­y and natural gas without interrupti­on to its 16 million customers in Northern and central California while it tries to put its finances in order.

The filing would not make the lawsuits disappear, but would result in all wildfire claims being consolidat­ed into a single proceeding before a bankruptcy judge, not a jury. That could shield the company from excessive jury verdicts and buy time by putting a hold on the claims.

Chapter 11 reorganiza­tion represents “the only viable option to address the company’s responsibi­lities to its stakeholde­rs,” Richard Kelly, chairman of PG&E’s board of directors, said in a statement.

“The Chapter 11 process allows us to work with these many constituen­ts in one court-supervised forum to comprehens­ively address our potential liabilitie­s and to implement appropriat­e changes.”

State officials are investigat­ing whether the utility’s equipment sparked the deadliest, most destructiv­e wildfire in California history, a November blaze that killed at least 86 people and burned down 15,000 homes in Northern California.

State investigat­ors have also blamed PG&E power lines for some fires in October 2017. Authoritie­s are also looking into the cause of a blaze that destroyed thousands of homes and killed 22 people in Santa Rosa last year.

California law requires utilities to pay damages for wildfires if their equipment caused the blazes — even if the utilities weren’t negligent.

PG&E, the nation’s largest utility by revenue, said it is giving the required 15 days’ notice that it plans to file for bankruptcy protection.

It said it will continue working with regulators and stakeholde­rs to consider how it can safely provide energy “in an environmen­t that continues to be challenged by climate change.”

The announceme­nt follows the resignatio­n of chief executive Geisha Williams a day earlier. She leaves with a $2.5 million severance payout, a spokesman told the Mercury News of San Jose.

In a Monday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said the liabilitie­s it faces from 2017 and 2018 wildfires could exceed $30 billion, not including punitive damages, fines and penalties.

The largest bankruptcy filing on record by a utility was Energy Future Holdings Corp. in 2014, which had $49.7 billion in liabilitie­s in today’s dollars, according to an analysis by Kevin Kelly, director of publicatio­ns at S&P Global.

Veteran New York bankruptcy lawyer H. Jeffrey Schwartz said PG&E has no other way of getting out from under the mountain of legal claims.

“The liability is too great. It’s too many claims, the aggregate amount is too great, and it looks at first blush to be indefensib­le because PG&E knew of this risk and didn’t clear the line areas as it should have,” Mr. Schwartz said.

He said he expects shareholde­rs to bear the brunt of the restructur­ing. Bankruptcy court has no say over the rates utility customers pay; those are decided by state regulators and politician­s.

As for the lawsuits, PG&E will negotiate with the plaintiffs and its other creditors a reorganiza­tion plan based on how much the utility is able to pay, said Hugh Wynne of Sovereign Research, an investment research firm.

“You avoid a situation where some jury in California thinks PG&E is responsibl­e for this fire, so we should hit them up for all these damages and let them sort out how they pay for it,” Mr. Wynne said.

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