That cost is excluding grid stability and transmission costs.
From what I’ve understood PG&E’s largest problem is the massive payouts and infrastructure upgrades needed from the wildfires, not the cost of the electricity itself.
That cost is excluding grid stability and transmission costs.
From what I’ve understood PG&E’s largest problem is the massive payouts and infrastructure upgrades needed from the wildfires, not the cost of the electricity itself.
Ain't that a direct result of them not investing in their infra for decades and all that technical debt catching up to them?