Patrols Successfully Spot, Report Fires in First Few Days of
Operations
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) is conducting daily aerial fire
patrols across hundreds of miles of its service area, including the
Sierra Nevada mountains in Northern and Central California and along the
Central Coast. Flights began on June 15 and will continue through
October 15 to assist state and local fire agencies with early fire
detection and response to stop fires from spreading. Since the patrols
began, PG&E has spotted nine fires in three regions, and in two cases,
was the first to report the fires.
PG&E is funding the daily fire patrols as part of its comprehensive
drought emergency response plan. The utility is using four fixed-wing
aircraft to fly from Redding to Auburn in the north, Auburn to Mariposa
in the Central Valley, and Santa Cruz to Santa Maria near the coast. A
fourth flight will be added in Mendocino County, beginning July 1.
Patrols are flying seven days a week from 3:30 in the afternoon until
dusk—the time of day when wildfires are most likely to ignite because
hot, dry weather is at its peak.
The patrols are coordinated through PG&E’s aerial operations. Spotters
report any smoke or fire they see to PG&E, CAL FIRE and the United
States Forest Service, if it is on federal land.
“PG&E is proud to partner with federal, state and local agencies to
mitigate the increased threat of wildfire caused by one of the most
severe droughts in state history. Aerial fire patrols are a proactive
approach to prevent and prepare for devastating fires during this
prolonged drought. We encourage all of our customers to be prepared and
have a plan in case of emergencies,” said Barry Anderson, vice president
of emergency preparedness and operations for PG&E.
“Fire activity has been extremely high as we head into the summer
months, made worse by ongoing drought conditions. CAL FIRE has a robust
aerial firefighting program that supports our ground forces; however our
aircraft focus on battling active fires. Reporting wildfires is
everybody’s responsibility and we greatly appreciate the work PG&E is
doing every day to survey from the air for potential fire starts,” said
Chief Dave Teter, CAL FIRE deputy director of fire protection. “Public
private partnerships like this are critical to our shared mission of
public safety.”
CAL FIRE has already responded to more than 2,700 wildfires, scorching
thousands of acres in the first six months of 2015—well above average.
In addition to its daily aerial fire patrols, PG&E is taking a number of
steps to prevent wildfires as part of its drought emergency response
plan including:
-
Conducting enhanced ground patrols on selected power circuits to
inspect, and prune or remove dead or dying trees that could fall into
lines and spark a fire.
-
Funding $2 million to local Fire Safe Councils for fire fuel
reduction, emergency access projects, and public education.
-
Funding lookout towers and cameras for early fire detection.
PG&E is also supporting CAL FIRE’s “One Less Spark, One Less Wildfire”
public awareness campaign. In July, PG&E will carry the message to 4
million customers on their paper billing envelopes. Another 1.7 million
customers who receive e-bills will receive it as a bill insert.
According to CAL FIRE, more than 90 percent of all wildfires in
California are sparked by people, and therefore preventable. You can
learn more on how to prevent and prepare for wildfires through CAL
FIRE’s public education efforts One
Less Spark, One Less Wildfire and Ready,
Set, Go.
About PG&E
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E
Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is one of the largest combined natural gas
and electric utilities in the United States. Based in San Francisco,
with more than 20,000 employees, the company delivers some of the
nation’s cleanest energy to nearly 16 million people in Northern and
Central California. For more information, visit www.pge.com
and www.pge.com/en/about/newsroom/index.page.
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Source: Pacific Gas and Electric Company