April 4, 2018 (San Diego) – The California Public Utilities Commission is considering whether or not to approve a settlement over the San Onofre nuclear power plant that shut down
A new deal to resolve billions of dollars in costs related to the San Onofre nuclear plant shutdown in 2012 is awaiting regulatory approval.
Adopting the proposed settlement means the
Jan. 31, San Francisco–Consumers can finally say goodbye to paying for the San Onofre nuclear plant under the terms of a new agreement relieving customers of an additional $873 million
The utilities are sticking by the shutdown deal for the San Onofre nuclear plant, approved in 2014. Consumer groups say it should be modified to better protect ratepayers. And
Five-plus years after the San Onofre nuclear plant leaked radiation and closed for good, state utility regulators have laid out a schedule for ending their review of what went wrong.
Southern California Edison undermined its claim to billions of dollars in damages from manufacturers of the replacement steam generators that caused the San Onofre nuclear plant failure by delaying proposed
n international arbitration panel’s decision to award Southern California Edison Co. only a net $52 million from Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. for defective steam generators at the San Onofre Nuclear
A three-member arbitration panel on Monday awarded Southern California utilities just $125 million in a multibillion-dollar lawsuit against a contractor for supplying faulty steam generators at the San Onofre nuclear
Though the project is still failing its main mission, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric last month asked for consumer rate increases for the cost of building
In a ruling made just before the close of business hours Tuesday, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) directed Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric to meet
Consumer Survey: Were You Harmed by Planned Power Outages?
We know that thousands of customers were impacted by the shutoffs and instead of feeling safe, many customers were left fearing for their safety, unprepared and angry.
Schools, universities and