SDG&E SEEKING $100M IN FEDERAL FUNDS TO ADVANCE WILDFIRE SAFETY EFFORTS IN HIGH FIRE THREAT DISTRICT
San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) is applying for up to $100 million in federal funds from the Department of Energy to support wildfire hardening initiatives around Tribal lands. If awarded, this grant would be matched by an additional $100 million from SDG&E, totaling $200 million for these efforts. The funding aims to improve energy infrastructure and enhance safety by undergrounding 64 miles of power lines and covering 6 miles with protected conductors, benefiting 10 Tribal communities. Pending approval from the California Public Utilities Commission, construction is expected between 2024 and 2026. SDG&E is also pursuing additional funding through various legislative measures to reduce customer costs amid a changing climate.
- Applying for $100 million in federal funds to enhance wildfire safety efforts.
- Potentially matches federal funding with an additional $100 million from SDG&E.
- Plans to underground 64 miles of power lines, enhancing infrastructure resilience.
- Construction anticipated from 2024 to 2026, improving energy delivery in tribal lands.
- Funding subject to approval from California Public Utilities Commission.
- If grant is denied, ongoing reliance on CPUC approval for fire hardening projects.
Federal Funds Would Support the Strategic Undergrounding and Overhead Hardening of Power Lines around Tribal Lands
"Our region has the most federally recognized Tribes of any county in the nation, and all are located in areas facing the highest risk for wildfire. These funds would help us continue to work with Tribes to provide safe and resilient energy in the face of a changing climate," said
As the company prioritizes strategic undergrounding of more power lines, the grant would help SDG&E leverage a good portion of its existing and planned fire hardening efforts over the next three years across the majority of Tribal Nations the company serves. The funding would further the company's efforts to strengthen its energy infrastructure and create communities that are safer, stronger and healthier by hardening approximately 70 miles of SDG&E's electric grid. This includes undergrounding approximately 64 miles of power line and covering 6 miles of line with covered conductor, benefiting up to 10 of the region's Tribal communities.
Seeking state and federal funds to pay for climate adaptation measures is an important element of SDG&E's four-part strategy to lessen the financial burden and improve affordability for customers which also includes:
- Pursuing additional federal funds available by maximizing federal tax credits for battery storage and microgrid facilities that can be refunded to customers;
- Advocating for legislation (AB 982) to remove costs from electric rates that could reduce monthly bills up to
7% and legislation to spread the cost of wildfire safety improvements over a longer period of time to reduce rate impacts; - Modernizing the way electricity is priced; and
- Stabilizing natural gas bills by advocating for improved utilization of existing infrastructure.
SDG&E submitted its application this week and anticipates receiving outcome notification from the
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