The Mercury News

Judge mulls requiring PG&E to turn off power more frequently

- By Michael Liedtke

SAN RAMON >> A federal judge overseeing Pacific Gas & Electric’s criminal probation said Tuesday that he is considerin­g requiring the utility to be more aggressive about turning off its electricit­y lines near tall trees, a plan that could double the number of power outages for some Northern California counties over the next decade.

The proposal outlined during a two-hour court hearing is the latest effort to prevent the utility’s equipment from sparking more deadly wildfires by reducing the likelihood that trees could fall into the utility’s long-neglected electrical equipment. U.S. District Judge William Alsup is overseeing PG&E’s safety precaution­s as part of the utility’s criminal probation after its natural gas lines blew up a San Bruno neighborho­od in 2010.

Alsup indicated Tuesday that he is leaning toward imposing the tougher conditions.

“My view is quite clear: We should save lives,” Alsup said. “We don’t have the luxury to wait around. I am not open to the idea that we would kick the can down the road and study the problem to death.”

The California Public Utilities Commission, which regulates PG&E, is opposing the additional power shut-offs, which it contends would impose undue hardship on about 900,000 people who live in the mostly rural counties of Trinity, Placer, Shasta, Tehama, Madera and Mendocino.

The federal court hearing, held online, came a day after California investigat­ors released a report concluding that a Shasta County wildfire that killed four people and destroyed more than 200 buildings last September was sparked by a tree that fell into a PG&E power line. Alsup blasted PG&E during Tuesday’s hearing for not cutting down the tree that started that fire after its removal had been recommende­d in 2018 and described the utility as “grossly negligent.”

PG&E’s potential liability for that September fire came a few months after it emerged from a 17-month stint in bankruptcy triggered by its responsibi­lity for a series of wildfires in 2017 and 2018 that killed more than 100 people and destroyed more than 27,000 buildings.

To reduce wildfire risks, PG&E in 2018 adopted a program of pre-emptively cutting power in areas where fire danger is high, typically in dry and windy conditions that occur during the late summer and early autumn through parts of a sprawling service territory that provides power to 16 million people — larger than the population of all but a handful of states.

Under the stricter safety measures Alsup is weighing, PG&E projected the utility would have to proactivel­y turn off the power 45 different times during the next decade, a 67% increase from the 27 deliberate outages predicted in that time under current standards.

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