Californians pay billions for power companies’ wildfire prevention efforts. Are they cost-effective?

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From 2019 through 2023, the California Public Utilities Commission authorized the three largest utilities to collect $27 billion in wildfire prevention and insurance costs from ratepayers.

Diane Moss lost her home in the Santa Monica Mountains after power lines ignited the apocalyptic Woolsey Fire in 2018. Since then, she’s pressed for a safer electric grid in California."It’s so easy to forget the risk that we live in — until it happens to you," said Moss, a longtime clean energy advocate. "All of us in California have to think about how we better prepare to survive disaster, which is only going to be more of a problem as the climate changes.

Kevin Geraghty, chief operating officer of SDG&E, called the wildfire spending process "the most highly-scrutinized, regulatory utility process I have ever been involved in, in my life." On a temperate, clear morning in the Sierra Nevada foothills east of Placerville in October, a PG&E construction crew donned yellow jackets and safety helmets and went about the work of burying power lines along a narrow, wooded road. Overhead lines snaked through thick trees in this area — prime fire risk territory. The workers buried the lines in a trench that had been dug using a heavy piece of equipment designed to cut hard concrete and soil.

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