PG&E Expands Scope of Wildfire Safety Center to Encompass, Ensure Readiness for Any Natural Disaster and Emergency
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) has rebranded its Wildfire Safety Operations Center (WSOC) to the Hazard Awareness & Warning Center (HAWC) to enhance its capability in monitoring various natural disasters, including earthquakes and flooding, alongside wildfires. This transition reflects PG&E's commitment to safety and proactive disaster management. The HAWC utilizes advanced technology, such as AI and machine learning, through over 500 cameras and 1,300 weather stations to ensure quick response and efficient communication during emergencies. The center plays a vital role in PG&E's Community Wildfire Safety Program.
- HAWC expands scope to monitor a wider range of natural disasters beyond wildfires.
- Implementation of AI and machine learning to improve disaster response.
- Reduction in average customer impact from Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) events from 108,843 in 2020 to 16,078 in 2021.
- None.
With Wildfire Information Still a Priority, New Hazard Awareness & Warning Center Enables Faster, Better Response to Storms, Earthquakes and More
Today,
Why? Without sacrificing any of the facility’s deep expertise related to wildfires, the expanded scope will allow the HAWC to serve as the source for reliable, real-time situational awareness of a broader range of natural disasters, emergencies and other events throughout PG&E’s service area. That includes enabling enterprise-level communications to ensure the appropriate level of response as well as providing a focal point of understanding potential risks to our gas and electric infrastructure.
“As with the WSOC, the HAWC is akin to an air-traffic control center for PG&E,” said
From its inception, the WSOC monitored wildfires. Now the HAWC monitors a broader range of natural disasters including wildfires, land movement (such as debris flows and slope failures), earthquakes, tsunamis, flooding and avalanche hazards. Through strong partnerships among PG&E’s internal teams as well as with external entities such as the
When it opened in
PG&E’s new headquarters will be in
One example of what’s available to operators in the HAWC are direct feeds from more than 500 high-definition cameras in high fire-threat areas. Of these cameras, 46 are included in a new Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine-learning testing program where the capability to differentiate wildfire smoke from fog and other false indicators during extremely dry, hot, and windy weather is invaluable to PG&E analysts and fire agencies. Images from the ALERTWildfire system are viewable online at www.alertwildfire.org.
Real-time data from 1,300 weather stations also is tracked by the HAWC staff, and that information plays a key role in evaluating whether to proactively turn off power for safety when elevated weather conditions include a potential fire risk.
The HAWC is part of PG&E’s Community Wildfire Safety Program. Through its 2021 wildfire safety work,
- Improved the Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) program for our customers and communities, using advanced weather forecasting technology and nearly 300 new sectionalizing devices, to impact 16,078 customers on average per outage in 2021, down from 108,843 customers impacted on average in 2020 and 287,770 customers impacted on average in 2019
- Launched an initiative to underground 10,000 miles of distribution powerlines in and near high fire-threat areas and hardened more than 200 distribution circuit miles to increase system resiliency
- Met and exceeded state vegetation safety standards across more than 1,900 miles in areas with the highest wildfire risk to manage trees that posed a risk to electric distribution powerlines and equipment
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Adjusted circuit settings to increase the speed at which safety devices turn off power in response to faults, known as Enhanced Powerline Safety Settings (EPSS), resulting in the CPUC Reportable ignition rate being reduced by nearly
80% as compared to the three-year average for EPSS-enabled circuits.
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