By Laila Kearney
NEW YORK, Feb 23 (Reuters) - California electric utility and natural gas provider PG&E Corp has scaled back plans to install power lines underground through 2026, slowing a move aimed at avoiding wildfire risks in the western United States, the company said on Thursday.
Oakland-based PG&E is set to bury 2,275 miles over the next three years, down from a previous goal of 3,600 miles over the same time period, as part of a larger capital project to gird its infrastructure against fires, company executives said in a quarterly earnings presentation to investors.
The reduction is "a result of conversations with our key stakeholders" and the need to prove that the company can pursue its undergrounding efforts in a cost-efficient way, PG&E Chief Executive Officer Patricia Poppe said.
PG&E's overhead power lines were blamed for the deadliest wildfire in California history in 2018 as well as other destructive widespread blazes in recent years, which led the company to file for bankruptcy protection amid billions of dollars in fire-related liability.
PG&E faces a manslaughter trial beginning in June related to fire deaths.
Over the long run, the utility, which provides electricity to about 5.5 million homes and slot gacor gampang menang businesses, ultimately plans to underground 10,000 miles of lines.
The company plans to file a 10-year plan later this year with more details about its effort to bury lines.
"That will clarify mileage and unit cost targets," Poppe said.
(Reporting by Laila Kearney; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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