San Diego Gas and Electric is seeking approval from the Public Utilities Commission to turn off the power to large sections of San Diego County during periods of high fire danger.
From 10news:
A plan to shut off power to prevent power lines from sparking a wildfire has SDG&E at odds with some water districts around the county. It may force the water districts to buy generators to keep the water running.
“The power demand of the station is the equivalent of a small city,” said Gary Arant.
The Bettsworth station is the Valley Center Municipal Water District’s main pumping station. It takes around 5 megawatts to power the facility.
“I can’t have my water system without power for 12, 18, 24 , 36 hours,” said Arant, the district’s general manager.
He is referring to SDG&E’s emergency power shut off plan. The plan calls for power lines to be shut off during high wind and dry conditions to avoid sparking a fire.
“Our concern is, with the SDG&E plan, we’re going to need about 8 to 12 of these units just maintain the critical service,” Arant said.
If the power is shut off, Arant says he would need auxiliary generators at a cost of $2.8 million to keep water running for customers and firefighters. But, Arant said negotiations with SDG&E have come to a halt.
“To have them unilaterally pull the information and pull the offers off the table was very disappointing,” Arant said.
He said the utility company had been willing to work with them on offsetting the costs of the generators among other agreements, but now they will have to go before the Public Utility Commission for arbitration.
“We’re assuming they’re going to seek permission through the PUC and they’re going to try to not compensate us for the extra cost,” said Arant.