Close Menu
Invest Insider News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Wednesday, May 13
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Invest Insider News
    • Home
    • Bitcoin
    • Commodities
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    • Utilities
    Invest Insider News
    Home»Utilities»Western State Utilities Plan To Mitigate Wildfires, Others Unprepared
    Utilities

    Western State Utilities Plan To Mitigate Wildfires, Others Unprepared

    June 28, 20256 Mins Read


    California Wildfires Utility

    Flames burn near power lines in California.

    Associated Press

    An arm of the U.S. Department of Energy has unveiled an online public database with 400 wildfire mitigation plans from electric utility companies in 19 states to increase wildfire resilience at a time when utilities in some other states may be unprepared.

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has released the database as a tool for state lawmakers and regulators as well as electric utility officials to better develop ways to mitigate the destruction caused by ever-increasing wildfires and better withstand these extreme events.

    “Wildfires are no longer a seasonal threat—they’re a year-round, national challenge with many areas in the country experiencing a new emerging risk,” André Coleman, PNNL chief scientist, noted in a June 10 public announcement. “This database empowers decision-makers at every level to see the different approaches being used, understand what’s working and where gaps exist, aid in new plan development, and collaborate on more effective mitigation strategies.”

    Based in Richland, Wash., PNNL says the public release of the Wildfire Mitigation Plans Database “comes at a time when wildfires are becoming more frequent and severe, posing increasing threats to power infrastructure, public safety, and taxpayer dollars.”

    The effort was funded by DOE’s Grid Deployment Office, which was founded in 2022 to fund projects that support critical power generation and make the national electricity grid more resilient. Another focus areas is to bolster electric transmission and distribution systems.

    “Our vision is to share a complete archive of all publicly available utility wildfire plans to see what the extended community of wildfire stakeholders wants to know. This open data enables conversations and analysis beyond the doors of the laboratory while giving us keen insight into proposed and potential industry solutions and trends,” said Rebecca O’Neil, PNNL advisor of electricity infrastructure. “We will continue to update the database and to offer wayfinding tools, through short topic-based analyses and a tool to search plans intelligently. Most of all, though, we want to hear from the user community what they are doing with the information and what more we can make possible.”

    Transmission Improvements Could Improve Power Reliability in Extreme Events

    High-voltage towers in the forest.

    getty

    The Grid Deployment Office released a 294-page “National Transmission Needs Study” in October 2023. The report addressed the importance of improving wildfire reliability and resilience in the California and the western part of the United States. It noted that the Northwest and Southwest regions were at “risk of load curtailment during extreme weather events and wildfires,” especially as those areas rely more “on variable energy resources to meet peak demand. Additional transmission upgrades would reduce risks to electricity reliability from extreme events.”

    PNNL stated that the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee estimated that wildfires nationally incur annual costs ranging from $394 and $893 billion, with as much as $202 billion from electricity losses. “On average, in the United States, wildfires caused by power utilities represent about 10% of wildfire starts, though they account for roughly 19% of the annual average national burn area,” PNNL says.

    Wildfire Plans Lacking for Midwest, Eastern and Southern Electric Utilities

    States with electric utility wildfire mitigation plans in PNNL’s database.

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

    Of interest in the PNNL database is the lack of wildlife mitigation plans for much of the Eastern part of the United States. The database is searchable by location, by year/range of years, and by utility or type.

    The state with the most wildlife mitigation plans was California (224 utility plans), followed by Oregon (87), Washington (53), Utah (19), Idaho (18) and Colorado (16).

    New Stanford University Report Finds Many Electric Utilities Unprepared for Wildfires Despite Risks

    In June, Stanford University’s Stanford Climate and Energy Policy Program published a 34-page report called “Wildfire: An Updated Look at Utility Risk and Mitigation.” It was written by Eric Macomber, I. Avery Bick, Michael Wara and Michael Mastrandrea.

    The report underscored the dangers of wildfires ignited by electric utility infrastructure in the United States. It discussed California wildfires as well as a greater awareness there and regulatory framework regarding risks of wildfires started by electric utility infrastructure. Consequently, Western states such California, Nevada, Oregon and Utah have more developed wildfire utility mitigation plans particularly by investor-owned utilities.

    At the same time, the study noted that the likelihood of catastrophic wildfires is much higher today in areas where it had not been a concern.

    “Wildfire risk has continued to increase across North America as a result of a number of interrelated trends, the report noted. “These include shifting weather conditions linked to climate change, which can cause fires to burn at higher intensity and spread more quickly across the landscape; historical fire suppression practices, which have caused flammable dead and dry vegetation to build up in many forested areas, increasing fire intensity; and development and land use patterns that have led vulnerable structures to be located in or near areas where fires are likely to occur, increasing the risk of catastrophic fires that spread from structure to structure and destroy entire communities.”

    Specifically investor-owned utilities in the Gulf Coast, Southeast and Upper Midwest in large part have not devised such mitigation plans even though they may be located in areas with great risk for wildfires.

    Advice for Utilities

    Midwestern new homes next to power lines.

    getty

    Stanford researchers acknowledged challenges by some utilities (like rural electric cooperatives and those owned by the public) may face in devising wildfire mitigation plans. However electric utility officials and regulators should take measures to safeguard power supplies and minimize the likelihood of their infrastructure sparking a wildfire. For instance, deactivated transmission infrastructure could ignite a wildfire.

    The report suggested than “an approach to wildfire mitigation which reduces the likelihood of electric infrastructure igniting catastrophic fires is key not only to protecting the safety of homes and communities threatened by fires, but also to the future development of the energy system. Because the costs that utilities incur as a result of both wildfire liability and infrastructure projects like mitigation plans are ultimately passed on to their customers in rates, it is important that mitigation programs are conducted in a manner that is not only practical and timely, but also efficient and cost-effective.”



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticlePeople with these surnames in UK could have unclaimed estates
    Next Article Après une course de 7 500% sur Bitcoin, Metaplanet est «prêt à gagner à long terme», explique l’expert

    Related Posts

    Utilities

    Boring Beats Brilliant: How a Utilities ETF Has Quietly Trounced the S & P 500 in Nearly Every Recession This Century

    May 13, 2026
    Utilities

    Firm ordered to pay United Utilities £3m over Thirlmere project

    May 12, 2026
    Utilities

    Cyber attacks still biggest fear for utilities

    May 12, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    How is the UK Commercial Property Market Performing?

    December 31, 2000

    How much are they in different states across the US?

    December 31, 2000

    A Guide To Becoming A Property Developer

    December 31, 2000
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Property

    Rep. Lisa Frizell Talks Special Session to Fix Property Taxes | KOA 850 AM & 94.1 FM

    August 27, 2024
    Bitcoin

    Trump Taps Bitcoin, Tether Bull Howard Lutnick for Transition Team

    August 16, 2024
    Bitcoin

    Bitcoin Crash At Hand? This Key Metric Hints At A Potential Price Drop To $40,000

    August 16, 2024
    What's Hot

    Anthropic unleashes finance agents for Claude • The Register

    May 5, 2026

    China sees vibrant innovation in green, low-carbon technologies

    July 16, 2025

    Global Stock Markets Are Eating the U.S. Market’s Lunch. Here’s Why—and How You Can Invest Internationally

    July 18, 2025
    Most Popular

    Bitcoin à 40 000 $? Mike McGlone de Bloomberg émet une prédiction de BTC inattendue

    June 3, 2025

    Disgraced Mt Gox CEO Suggests Bitcoin Hard Fork to Recover $5 Billion in Customer Funds

    March 1, 2026

    The upstart exchange drawing traders to the world’s best-performing stock market

    December 30, 2025
    Editor's Picks

    Sustainability in Property 2025

    May 28, 2025

    Biggest Stock Market Crashes: Causes, Damage, Impact

    July 19, 2024

    Global Stocks Hold Steady with Fed Decision and Oracle Results Driving Sentiment

    December 10, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 Invest Insider News

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.