Archived copies of the article: archive.today ghostarchive.org web.archive.org
I’ll note that as temperatures have risen, fires spread much faster
The insurance challenges are now making it more expensive and difficult for some utilities to attract the capital required to harden their grids
The grids they’ve been refusing to maintain or harden for decades, those grids? Given their past history, they wouldn’t be acting now unless there was pressure on them - they’d just be handing out another round of executive bonuses and stock dividends.
As it stands now, utilities have become the “insurer of last resort” when it comes to damage claims from wildfires tied to their equipment, said Emily Fisher, general counsel at the Edison Electric Institute, an investor-owned utility trade group. The industry has become difficult to insure because there isn’t a limit to their potential wildfire liabilities, Fisher added.
Power companies also need to spend billions of dollars to make their infrastructure less prone to start fires, funding fixes such as installing weather monitoring equipment, burying power lines and replacing old poles. “It’s not a sustainable regime,” Fisher said.
It is certainly sustainable, though it may not be as profitable. I’m sorry, but I couldn’t care less what the general counsel for an investor-owned utility trade group that only cares about the next quarter’s earnings has to say on the matter.
Is this that Free Market I’ve always heard about?
It certainly is. And locally owned and operated production is communism
points and screeches
This warms my heart to see corporations and not just us lowly serfs feeling the pain of man made climate change.
Welcome to the party, pal!
have they tried not starting wildfires?
That requires doing pretty much all the maintenance that has been deferred for decades (PG&E for example didn’t inspect power lines between their installation circa 1920 and when the cast-iron hooks holding up the wires wore through in 2018, causing the wires to fall and start a fire which took out a few towns
That’s fucked up
Instructions unclear, increased lobbyist funding for deregulation
That doesn’t sound very profitable