SAN
FRANCISCO (AP) — Millions of Californians spent part of the week in the
dark in an unprecedented effort by the state’s large electrical
utilities to prevent another devastating wildfire. It was the fifth time
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. has pre-emptively cut the power but
by far the largest to date in the utility’s effort to prevent a deadly
wildfire sparked by its power lines.
But do the power shut-offs actually prevent fires?
Experts
say it’s hard to know what might have happened had the power stayed on,
or if the utility’s proactive shutoffs are to thank for California’s
mild fire season this year.
“It’s
like trying to prove a negative,” said Alan Scheller-Wolf, professor of
operations management and an energy expert at Carnegie Mellon’s Tepper
School of Business. “They can’t prove they prevented a disaster because
there’s no alternative universe where they didn’t try this.”
The
winds that prompted the mass outage that affected nearly 2 million
people in northern and central parts of the state shifted southward by
Friday, where a wind-fueled wildfire prompted officials to order the
evacuation of 100,000 people from their homes in foothills of the San
Fernando Valley.
California is experiencing
the first major fire activity of the season after two years that brought
some of the most devastating fires on record, many of them caused by
utility equipment. Until Monday, fires had covered only about 5% of the
acreage burned by that date last year, and only about 13% of the average
for the last five years.
But it’s too early — and maybe impossible — to tell if that can be attributed to increased measures to cut power.
“We
have good reason to be skeptical, and the reason is that PG&E
bears the costs of starting a fire, but they don’t bear the costs of
shutting off power,” said Severin Borenstein, faculty director of the
Energy Institute at University of California, Berkeley’s Haas School of
Business.
He noted that weather forecasting
is notoriously difficult, “so even if PG&E were doing the best
possible job, it would not get it right sometimes.”
PG&E
said in a statement that employees located 23 spots where parts of its
systems were damaged during the strong winds, but officials have
declined to provide details, saying it will be included in a
state-mandated report.
Gov. Gavin Newsom
blasted PG&E for what he called decades of mismanagement,
underinvestment and lousy communication with the public. He pointed to
San Diego Gas & Electric, which pioneered proactive power
shutoffs following a devastating 2007 fire sparked by its equipment, as a
model for responsibly shutting off power in bad weather.
“Specifically
as it relates to their predictive analysis, their weather station, I
had a chance to visit it a few months ago,” Newsom said. “It’s
exceptional, it’s at another level.”
SDG&E,
which serves 3.6 million people, has spent about $1.5 billion to better
predict bad weather and update its equipment, said Chief Operating
Officer Caroline Winn. The company hired meteorologists, data scientists
and fire experts and deployed an extensive array of weather monitors,
she said. It replaced about 18,000 wooden poles with steel, installed
new conductors and increased the wind tolerance in remote areas, using
data from weather sensors to know which equipment was most at risk. The
company also sectionalized electrical circuits so power managers could
target outages more precisely to the lines facing danger.
“We didn’t have all the answers then, but what we did know as we had to change and we had to do things differently,” Winn said.
A
decade of data and the refined grid have helped SDG&E to
narrowly target outages when they’re necessary, she said. Of its 14
outages since 2013, only two affected more than 20,000 customers and
most have been significantly fewer.
Outside
California, other large western utilities in Nevada and Utah said they,
too, are considering proactively shutting off power to avoid sparking
fires.
“We want to make sure our system
isn’t the cause of one of these devastating fires,” said Tiffany
Erickson, a spokeswoman for Rocky Mountain Power in Utah, which has
notified 5,000 households and businesses that shutoffs are possible
during dangerous weather.
Last month,
Southern California Edison shut off electricity to 14,000 customers in
the remote Mammoth Lakes area along the eastern side of the Sierra
Nevada because of forecasts of extreme winds and extremely dry
vegetation.
Winds reached 88 mph (141 kph)
and the California Highway Patrol banned trucks and campers from
traveling along a highway after gusts blew over big-rig trucks, the
utility said. The winds knocked down power poles and damaged electric
circuits.
“It’s abundantly clear that the
conditions that were in place up there were so severe that they could
likely have caused a spark to occur,” said Don Daigler, a company
spokesman. “We’re not going to do this willy-nilly.”
Stephen
Pyne, a retired Arizona State University professor and fire historian,
likened the power line problem to challenges posed by railroads until
the early 1900s, when steam engines and train wheels regularly threw
sparks that ignited deadly fires.
“Think
about the railroads then,” Pyne said. “They were enormously powerful —
economically, politically, socially. And we took it on. Railroads ceased
to be a source of regular or lethal emissions (of sparks.)”
___
Cooper
reported from Phoenix. Associated Press writers Olga R. Rodriguez in
San Francisco; Keith Ridler in Boise, Idaho; Brady McCombs in Salt Lake
City and Brian Melley in Los Angeles contributed to this story.
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