The
owner of the biggest U.S. power utility has filed a motion
seeking court approval for a $5.5 billion debtor-in-possession
financing, it said in a statement.
PG&E listed assets of $71.39 billion and liabilities of $51.69
billion, in a court document filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court
for the Northern District of California.
"Throughout this process, we are fully committed to enhancing
our wildfire safety efforts, as well as helping restoration and
rebuilding efforts across the communities impacted by the
devastating Northern California wildfires," PG&E interim Chief
Executive Officer John Simon said.
The company said it intends to pay suppliers in full under
normal terms for goods and services provided on or after the
date of the Chapter 11 filing.
Separately, PG&E shareholder BlueMountain Capital Management LLC
said it was "deeply disappointed" that the company's board
ignored calls from multiple parties to abandon its "reckless and
irresponsible plan to file for bankruptcy."
The investment firm said it would propose a slate of board
directors no later than Feb. 21, and urged all PG&E stakeholders
to support change at the company.
PG&E, which had a debt burden of more than $18 billion, said
earlier this month it would need to pursue a court-supervised
reorganization in the aftermath of the blazes, including
November's so-called Camp Fire.
The Camp Fire broke out on the morning of Nov. 8 near the
mountain community of Paradise, sweeping through the town and
killing at least 86 people, in the deadliest and most
destructive wildfire in state history.
Reinsurance company Munich Re termed the Camp Fire as the
world's most expensive natural disaster of 2018 and earlier this
month pegged the overall losses from it at $16.5 billion.
PG&E, which filed for bankruptcy once before in 2001, warned in
November it could face "significant liability" in excess of its
insurance coverage if its equipment was found to have caused the
Camp Fire and other destructive wildfires.
Earlier this month, a state fire agency said PG&E equipment was
not to blame for a 2017 wildfire in California's wine country,
but the company faces dozens of lawsuits from owners of homes
and businesses that burned during that and other 2017 fires.
The San Francisco-based company provides electricity and natural
gas to more than six million customers in Northern California.
Last year, lawmakers gave it permission to raise rates to cover
wildfire losses from 2017. But elected officials this month
showed little appetite for new rate hikes or other maneuvers to
prevent a bankruptcy filing.
(Reporting by Subrat Patnaik in Bengaluru and Jim Christie in
San Francisco; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier and Saumyadeb
Chakrabarty)
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