California’s PG&E to avoid criminal charges in settlements over two major wildfires
2022.04.12 00:01
FILE PHOTO: A firefighter continues to hold the line of the Dixie Fire near Taylorsville, California, U.S., August 10, 2021. REUTERS/David Swanson
By Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) – California utility PG&E (NYSE:PCG) Corp has reached settlement agreements with district attorneys representing Northern California counties to avoid prosecution over two major wildfires, with the company agreeing to pay $55 million.
“As a result of these agreements, no criminal charges will be filed in the Dixie Fire (2021), and the criminal complaint regarding the Kincade Fire (2019) will be dismissed,” the company said in a statement on Monday.
The financial commitments within the agreements total $55 million over five years, and PG&E will not seek recovery of these costs from customers, it added.
PG&E did not admit wrongdoing in the settlements reached with prosecutors for the 2021 Dixie Fire and the 2019 Kincade Fire in Sonoma County.
The Dixie fire, ranked as the second-largest California wildfire on record, scorched through Northern California communities and forests in August, forcing thousands to flee from their homes and prompted precautionary power shutdowns. PG&E had said the blaze may have started when a tree fell onto one of the utility’s power cables.
The Kincade wildfire in California’s wine country in 2019 that forced some 2,000 people to flee homes was caused by PG&E’s electrical transmission lines, the state’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) said in 2020.
PG&E entered agreements with Butte, Lassen, Plumas, Shasta, Sonoma and Tehama counties to strengthen wildfire safety and response programs and to work with local organizations affected by the fires to help rebuild impacted communities, the company said on Monday.
The utility emerged from bankruptcy in 2020. It had sought protection from creditors after wildfires sparked by its equipment in 2017 and 2018 drove the utility’s potential liabilities into tens of billions of dollars.
Late last year, PG&E said it had received a subpoena from the U.S. attorney’s office seeking documents from the Californian utility related to the Dixie Fire.