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Southern California Edison sueded Los Angeles County and others for the Eaton Fire

Southern California Edison filed a lawsuit against Los Angeles County, Southern California Gas, and water agencies on Friday. They allege that they are responsible for the deadly Eaton Fire, which devastated thousands of homes and businesses last year.

SCE, which is owned by Edison International, filed complaints in the Los?Angeles Superior Court where more than 1,000 lawsuits were filed by business and residential owners to hold SCE accountable for the destruction of property that occurred.

The Eaton Fire erupted on January 7, 2025 and tore through Southern California. It killed 19 people, destroyed more than 9,400 homes, and destroyed other buildings.

SCE acknowledged that circumstantial evidence suggests that one of its idled transmission lines that were high-voltage could have ignited a fire at Eaton amid winds as high as 100 mph.

SCE has said that numerous analyses and reports have identified additional factors which likely contributed to the severity of the fire.

The report cites the failure of Los Angeles County and other government agencies to send timely evacuation alerts. It also cites a lack of water and overgrown brush in public land, as well as a failure to allocate enough?resources to fire suppression.

SCE claims that if the county and its agencies had acted with care, "most of those injured and killed in the Eaton Fire, as well as the damage to property, could have either been prevented or reduced significantly."

SCE claims that the risks and defects within the natural-gas distribution network of SoCalGas - a subsidiary company of Sempra - contributed to the spread.

In the lawsuit, SoCalGas claims that it knew its system was a fire risk but failed to implement mitigation measures. SCE claims that this caused?gas fires, explosions, and re-ignitions of fires in the early stages of Eaton Fire.

Sempra and Los Angeles County have not responded to comments.

SCE is facing 998 lawsuits from businesses and individuals, as well as suits by government entities and insurance companies. In September, the U.S. Department of Justice sued SCE for damage to National Forest System land.

SCE has received nearly 2,000 claims through its Wildlife Recovery Compensation Program. It has made 95 offers worth $42.8 million. The company reports that more than half of these offers were accepted.

David Eisenhauer, spokesperson for SCE, said: "We are committed to helping the communities recover from the fires of January." (Reporting and editing by William Mallard in Boston, with Nate Raymond reporting from Boston)

(source: Reuters)