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5 years agoon
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AP NewsSAN FRANCISCO — Pacific Gas & Electric is still operating a rickety power line near the one that ignited a 2018 wildfire that wiped out the Northern California city of Paradise and killed 85 people, according to an expert inspection conducted as part of a legal claim.
In this Dec. 19, 2018, photo provided by Tort Claimants Committee, representing victims of wildfires, shows Pacific Gas & Electric’s Cresta-Rio Oso transmission line, about 100 yards (91 meters) from another transmission line known as Caribou-Palmero, that is responsible for igniting the Camp Fire. (Tort Claimants Committee via AP)
U.S. District Judge William Alsup is overseeing PG&E as part of a five-year criminal probation imposed after the utility’s natural gas lines triggered a deadly explosion in 2010. A federal jury found the company guilty of five counts of safety violations and the one count of obstruction.
Alsup responded swiftly after being informed about the potential problems on the Cresta-Rio Oso line in a letter from the expert inspector. The judge issued an order on Thursday telling PG&E to be prepared to discuss the evidence presented to him during a Feb. 19 hearing in San Francisco.
PG&E has repeatedly said it has learned from past mistakes, prompting the company to intensify the inspection of 18,000 miles of overhead power lines in a service territory in Northern California that provides electricity to 16 million people.
Even so, the nation’s largest utility has acknowledged that its electrical grid needs so many upgrades that it will probably have to deliberately turn off the power periodically during hot and windy conditions when power lines can topple and start wildfires for at least a few more years in parts of Northern California to minimize fire risks.
In court documents filed in December, PG&E told Alsup the company had inspected 50,000 transmission structures in high-risk areas since the 2018 fire, using people and drones to check the condition of the equipment.
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“All of the highest-priority conditions identified as a result of those inspections have been repaired or made safe,” PG&E assured Alsup. The filing didn’t specify which power lines had been examined and repaired.
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