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Southern California Edison and others reach agreement to recover $2 billion related to wildfires

Southern California Edison and others reach agreement to recover $2 billion related to wildfires

Southern California Edison reached an agreement with several parties to settle the dispute. The settlement will allow the utility recover approximately $2 billion from the $5.6 billion losses incurred in 2017-2018 due to wildfires and mudslides.

Edison International, the parent company of the company, announced on Friday that out of the $2 billion, approximately $1.6 billion is made up of uninsured claim and $400 million of legal fees paid by May 31, this year.

Costs are mostly related to the Woolsey Fire of 2018, which burned 96.949 acres in California. It destroyed 1,643 buildings, killed 3 people, and forced the evacuation of over 295,000 people.

Last year, the utility claimed it wanted to recover $1.6billion in losses related the Thomas and Koenigstein Fires that started in 2017, and the Montecito Mudslides in 2018.

SCE is also facing several lawsuits that claim that its electrical equipment caused major wildfires across California, such as the Eaton Fire that ravaged Los Angeles earlier this summer.

Southern California is also authorized to recover 35 percent of the losses paid after May 31 2025, as well as $71 millions or 85% of restoration costs incurred.

California Public Utilities Commission will have to approve the agreements, according to the utility.

SCE is expecting to receive proceeds by 2026. This would allow for a recovery of 43 percent of costs associated with 2017-2018 wildfires and mudslides, when combined with pre-approved cost recoveries related to TKM events. (Reporting from Tanay Srivastava and Vallari in Bengaluru, editing by Leroy Leo.)

(source: Reuters)