Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PG&E reaches $11B deal with Calif. wildfire insurers

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SAN FRANCISCO — Pacific Gas & Electric has agreed to pay $11 billion to a group of insurance companies representi­ng claimants from deadly Northern California wildfires in 2017 and 2018 as the company tries to emerge from bankruptcy, the utility announced Friday.

The utility said in a statement the tentative agreement was reached with insurance companies holding 85% of the insurance claims from fires that included the November blaze that destroyed the town of Paradise, killing 86 people.

It does not include thousands of uninsured and underinsur­ed fire victims who have filed their own claims against PG&E, including for wrongful deaths.

The insurers said in a separate statement the settlement is well below the $20 billion the companies had sought in bankruptcy court, although it is more than PG&E offered as part of a filing in bankruptcy court earlier this week.

“While this proposed settlement does not fully satisfy the approximat­ely $20 billion in group members’ unsecured claims, we hope that this compromise will pave the way for a plan of reorganiza­tion that allows PG&E to fairly compensate all victims and emerge from Chapter 11 by the June 2020 legislativ­e deadline,” the insurers said.

The deal removes some of the uncertaint­y hanging over PG&E as it tries to climb out of its financial pit. The company’s stock rose nearly 11% Friday to close at $11.18.

“Today’s settlement is another step in doing what’s right for the communitie­s, businesses, and individual­s affected by the devastatin­g wildfires,” PG&E CEO Bill Johnson said in a statement.

Two major outstandin­g questions still linger over the bankruptcy, said Michael Wara, a senior research scholar at Stanford University and a member of the state wildfire committee: How much PG&E will pay the outstandin­g fire victims, and whether a jury will find the utility liable for the 2017 Tubbs fire that took 22 lives.

“It’s really hard to know what the PG&E bankruptcy resolution will look like. Because you don’t know how much money the company has to come up with,” Mr. Wara said.

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