Southern California Edison said the Los Angeles Fire Department
is investigating the cause of the Hurst Fire and believes the
utility's equipment caused the blaze, which did not destroy any
structures or cause any deaths. In a required filing with state
utility regulators, SCE said “absent additional evidence, SCE
believes its equipment may be associated with ignition of the
Hurst Fire.”
In a second filing, the utility said it is looking into whether
an idle transmission line became energized and possibly sparked
the deadly Eaton Fire, which also sparked Jan. 7 devastated
Altadena. But it still maintains there’s no evidence that its
equipment was responsible for starting that blaze.
The utility acknowledged last month that fire agencies are
investigating whether its equipment may have started the Hurst
Fire, which scorched about 1.25 square miles (3.2 square km)
around the Sylmar neighborhood of Los Angeles.
The utility said it is cooperating with investigators.
Regarding the Eaton Fire, SCE said it was reviewing a video that
purports to show “flashes” of electrical arcing from a tower
near where the blaze began. The utility said preliminary
investigation found no evidence that arcing occurred, while
acknowledging that some damage was found on related equipment.
“SCE does not know when this damage occurred and a comparison
between pre- and post-fire photographs is underway,” the filing
said.
Multiple lawsuits against SCE citing the video claim the
utility’s equipment sparked the Eaton Fire, but the utility
maintains that it's still too early to make that determination.
“SCE has not identified typical or obvious indications that
would support this association, such as broken conductors, fresh
arc marks in the preliminary origin area, or evidence of faults
on the energized lines running through that area,” the utility
said in a news release announcing its filings.
The Eaton Fire, which killed at least 17 people, was fully
contained last week. Full containment was also reached on the
Palisades Fire, the largest of the blazes that destroyed
thousands of homes and killed at least 12 people.
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