Power shutoffs that could ultimately affect more than 1 million people in Southern California began Wednesday morning as high winds raised the risk of live wires sparking wildfires.
Edison International’s Southern California Edison cut
electricity to 849 homes and businesses in Los Angeles and Ventura counties as
of 9:15 a.m. local time, according to its website. The utility warned it could
shut power to more than 271,000 customer accounts in eight counties, or about
813,000 people based on the size of the average household. That would
constitute the region’s largest public-safety blackout this year.
Dry winds strong enough to knock down power lines are
forecast to rattle Southern California through Thursday, exposing more than 6.4
million people to critical fire weather, according to the National Weather
Service and the U.S. Storm Prediction Center.
“If fires do start they will have a pretty dangerous
spread,” said Marc Chenard, a senior branch forecaster at the center. The
danger isn’t just the immediate conditions, but the prolonged dryness that has
plagued the area and turned trees, grasses and shrubs into fuel. Red flag fire
warnings are posted in and around Los Angeles County as the threat grows.
California has already been charred by record fires that
have burned 4.2 million acres and killed 31 people in 2020. Utilities including
Edison and PG&E Corp. have cut power repeatedly to prevent live wires from
falling into dry brush.
Sempra Energy’s San Diego Gas & Electric utility also
warned that 88,700 homes and businesses, or more than 260,000 people, could
lose power Wednesday night or Thursday morning, and possibly remain in the dark
through Sunday or Monday. Most affected customers would be in the mountains
east of San Diego. PG&E, California’s largest utility, said it may cut
power to about 600 homes and businesses in Kern County this week, as well.
Last week, Edison cut power to thousands of customers on
Thanksgiving during high winds. In 2019, PG&E filed for bankruptcy after
its wires sparked the deadliest blaze in state history.
The high winds and blackouts will be mostly confined to Southern California but could touch a portion of the state’s Central Valley as well.