News

At a Tuesday hearing, Southern California Edison attorney Douglas Dixon told a Los Angeles judge that his client planned to ...
Investigators are seeking to determine whether Southern California Edison's equipment sparked the Jan. 7 inferno, which killed 19 people and destroyed 9,000 homes. If Edison is found responsible, “the ...
The utility expects the fund's payments to be reimbursed by California's public wildfire insurance program, which Gov. Gavin ...
Ninety percent of the Northern California community of Paradise was destroyed in 2018 when the Camp Fire tore through the Butte County town. Now more than six years later, Paradise continues to ...
SoCal Edison sued by LA County, Pasadena and Sierra Madre over Eaton Fire Los Angeles County and the city of Pasadena filed separate lawsuits against Southern California Edison on Wednesday over ...
A judge on Tuesday ordered Southern California Edison to preserve data, equipment and evidence related to the deadly Eaton fire, a decision praised by attorneys who sued the giant utility company ...
Southern California Edison also reported that it filed an electric safety incident report related to the Eaton Fire, which devastated much of Altadena, California, and was now burning mostly in ...
Southern California Edison, based in Rosemead, is an investor-owned public utility that provides electricity to about 15 million people across a 50,000-square-mile area in Southern California.
Southern California Edison is looking into whether its equipment is tied to the Eaton and Hurst Fires, its parent company said, though the cause has not been officially determined.
Southern California Edison had earlier said it did not have a fault on the transmission lines until over one hour after the Eaton fire started. The utility, in a letter filed with the California ...
The California Public Utilities Commission said this week that as of the end of last year, Edison is at 28.2 percent, PG&E is at 32.9 percent and SDG&E is at 43.2 percent renewable energy.
BURIED BUT NOT FORGOTTEN: Have a spare billion dollars? Southern California Edison is planning to bury its power lines as it rebuilds in fire-damaged Los Angeles — and is looking for money.