Porterville Recorder

PG&E plan offers billions to victims, others after wildfires

- By DAISY NGUYEN AP PHOTO BY JEFF CHIU

SAN FRANCISCO — PG&E Corp. released a plan Monday to offer nearly $18 billion to victims, insurance companies and cities and local government­s in Northern California that battled wildfires sparked by electrical equipment.

The preliminar­y plan filed in federal court is part of its plan to exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

PG&E sought the protection in January because it said it could not afford an estimated $30 billion in damages from deadly wildfires caused by company equipment, including a November fire that killed 86 people and largely destroyed the town of Paradise.

The company said in court papers it was confident it could raise more than $30 billion in debt and equity financing from the largest banks in the nation. The strategy would not result in rate increases for its customers, PG&E said.

“Under the Plan we filed today, we will meet our commitment to fairly compensate wildfire victims and we will emerge from Chapter 11 financiall­y sound and able to continue meeting California’s clean energy goals,” CEO and President Bill Johnson said in a statement.

PG&E is under deadline pressure to emerge from bankruptcy by June 2020 in order to participat­e in a state wildfire fund to help California’s major utilities pay out future claims as climate change makes wildfires across the U.S. West more frequent and more destructiv­e.

The plan must be approved by state regulators.

San Francisco leaders further complicate­d the restructur­ing plan by offering on Sunday to buy pieces of PG&E’S assets for $2.5 billion so the city can run parts of the power system on its own.

Mayor London Breed and City Attorney Dennis Herrera said in a statement that the offer was “competitiv­e, fair and equitable” and would lead to financial stability for the beleaguere­d investorow­ned utility.

“We look forward to positive, collaborat­ive discussion­s with PG&E on this critical issue,” the statement issued Sunday said. “Throughout this process we will protect the best interests of our city as we strive toward the independen­t energy future that San Francisco deserves.”

PG&E said in a statement that it doesn’t believe the sale would be “in the best interests of our customers and stakeholde­rs.” About 452,000 of the utility’s 5.4 million electric customers are in San Francisco.

San Francisco, where PG&E was founded more than a century ago, began examining options for taking over pieces of the utility after it filed for bankruptcy protection. The city isn’t looking to buy any part of PG&E’S gas system.

 ??  ?? In this Dec. 12, 2017 file photo, city attorney Dennis Herrera, center, speaks at a news conference next to acting mayor London Breed, left, at City Hall in San Francisco. San Francisco officials are offering to buy Pacific Gas & Electric’s power lines and other infrastruc­ture in the city for $2.5 billion. Mayor London Breed and City Attorney Dennis Herrera presented the offer in a letter sent to the utility Friday, Sept. 6.
In this Dec. 12, 2017 file photo, city attorney Dennis Herrera, center, speaks at a news conference next to acting mayor London Breed, left, at City Hall in San Francisco. San Francisco officials are offering to buy Pacific Gas & Electric’s power lines and other infrastruc­ture in the city for $2.5 billion. Mayor London Breed and City Attorney Dennis Herrera presented the offer in a letter sent to the utility Friday, Sept. 6.

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