PG&E says power shutoffs could come to 8 Northern California counties due to fire danger

Ahead of a weeklong heat wave that will bake Sacramento and most of Northern California in sweltering temperatures, Pacific Gas and Electric Co. is warning that critical fire danger may lead to its first public safety power shutoffs of the year in across eight counties to prevent the utility’s equipment from sparking wildfires.

On Sunday, officials of the Oakland-based company said its meteorologists were forecasting an “elevated” risk for shutoffs in parts of eight Northern California counties: Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Napa, Shasta, Solano, Tehama and Yolo. The power shutoffs are the first wildfire-safety blackouts undertaken this year by PG&E, which has come under consistent criticism for engineering power shutoffs in past years to ward off fires caused by its equipment.

The areas affected and the timing of the shutoffs correspond with the National Weather Service’s red flag warning, which was issued for a wide swath of Northern California between 11 p.m. Monday and 8 p.m. Tuesday. Those dangerous conditions produce an increased risk of damage to the electric system that could ignite fires fueled by dry vegetation, said PG&E spokeswoman Karly Hernandez.

She said that PG&E is committed to stopping wildfires and that such engineered outages are “a last resort” for the utility under such extreme conditions of hot temperatures, low humidity and strong winds.

“We initiate PSPS when the weather forecast is for such severe weather that people’s safety, lives, homes and businesses may be in danger of wildfires,” Hernandez said. “As each weather situation is unique, we carefully review various factors when deciding if power must be turned off.”

When and where will power shutoffs occur?

The high fire risk conditions are expected to continue through the July 4 holiday as Sacramento and the surrounding region could reach 110 degrees on Wednesday. The weather service also issued an excessive heat warning for all of the Sacramento Valley between 11 a.m. Monday and 8 p.m. Saturday as temperatures are expected to exceed 105 degrees through the weekend.

In an update, PG&E officials said as many as 12,000 customers could lose power beginning at 2:30 a.m. Tuesday under the so-called PSPS. The largest batch of homes and businesses that could lose power are in Shasta County, where as many as 8,800 ratepayers could be taken offline.

Maps provided by the utility showed outages were planned on the western reaches of Yolo County including Winters and homes south of Putah Creek, as well as in Rumsey, Guinda and around the Cache Creek area. PG&E estimated that about 200 customers would be in the dark if the outage is triggered.

Other areas under a potential PSPS include homes on the western edge of the Valley west of Willows, Orland, Corning, Red Bluff and Anderson. A large area of potential shutoff ring the Redding area as well, along Highway 299 and in the Bella Vista and Palo Cedro areas.

As many as 1,800 customers across western Tehama County could have their power severed; Colusa County (550 customers) and Glenn (361) also had sizable potential for outages. All other counties would have fewer than 100 customers affected.

Customers affected by county, according to Hernandez:

  • Colusa: 550 ratepayers

  • Glenn: 361

  • Lake: 49

  • Napa: 9

  • Shasta: 8,888

  • Solano: 96

  • Tehama: 1,855

  • Yolo: 204

Restoring power to affected customers would likely take 12 daylight hours once the weather “all clear” has been given. PG&E crews need to inspect the de-energized lines to make sure they weren’t damaged during the shutoff. PG&E maps indicate that could come as soon as 2 p.m. Wednesday.

Conditions ripe for wildfires, PG&E says

PG&E officials said in a weather update Sunday that in addition to the high temperatures, “there will also be a period of breezy northerly winds across primarily the northern and western Sacramento Valley and adjacent foothills” beginning Monday night.

Weather service forecasters and PG&E officials say breezes in some spots along the Valley’s western tier — from Solano County north to Red Bluff — could gust as high as 30 mph “although, localized gusts of 35-40 mph will be possible,” PG&E said.

PG&E forecasts are particularly concerned about conditions on the ground, noting that “the grass crop has cured across the lower elevations and dead fuel moisture values are at seasonal dryness levels.” That means that the combination of hot air, strong winds and tinder-dry grasses common in the Valley and foothills could lead to quick-moving fires.

The utility said in its weather update that it has already shifted 624 of 788 circuits in the affected areas to “enhanced powerline safety settings,” which adjust the sensitivity of the equipment to power off faster if a problem is detected. These buffers, according to PG&E, allow lines to be de-energized automatically “within one-tenth of a second” if vegetation or flames interfere with sagging lines or overheated transformers. Officials touted in a report to state regulators that such equipment settings reduced ignitions to its equipment by 68% in 2022.

Utility blamed equipment sparking wildfires

PG&E in recent years has imposed planned power shutoffs in the face of dire wildfire weather. The utility company’s equipment has been blamed for sparking some of the worst fires in state history, including the 2018 Camp Fire that devastated Paradise, and PG&E Corp. has been found liable for billions of dollars worth of destruction.

The utility since 2017 has been blamed for starting more than 30 wildfires, blazes that destroyed more than 23,000 homes and businesses and has killed more than 100 people.

Last year, the company engineered two PSPS events out of four possible scenarios the company identified, according to company filings to the California Public Utilities Commission. In late August, the company cut power across the same “footprint” under Tuesday’s possible outage, affecting nearly 4,000 ratepayers out of the 8,400 who were notified of a possible outage from Yolo and Napa counties north to Shasta County. A second PSPS event three weeks later affected roughly 1,200 customers, roughly one in five who could have been affected, in a smaller footprint in Tehama, Lake and Napa counties, according to the filings.

PG&E customers enrolled in its Medical Baseline program who have not verified that they received notification of the potential shutoffs will be visited at home by a PG&E employee when possible, the utility has said for previous outages. Officials said primary focus will be given to customers who rely on electricity for critical life-sustaining equipment.

Hernandez, the PG&E spokeswoman, said the utility will open six “community resource centers” Tuesday in the blackout areas, enabling customers to cool off in the air conditioning, get free bottled water and snacks and charge their phones. PG&E mapping indicated those centers would be open beginning at 8 a.m. Tuesday in Redding, Anderson, Elk Creek and Stonyford, among other areas.

More information on the PSPS and how to get alerts are available on PG&E website.