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May is National Wildfire Awareness Month

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To recognize National Wildfire Awareness Month, Pacific Power is encouraging Oregonians to prepare for fire season. Fire weather conditions, such as severe drought combined with summer windstorms or active wildfires, could lead to safety-related power outages.

Long-term forecasts by Pacific Power’s meteorology team are indicating 2025 will have a warmer and drier summer than normal, with the outlook predicting above-normal significant fire potential east of the Cascades beginning in July. This is due to large amounts of carryover fire fuels and brush from previous years, and an early onset of warm and dry weather. Above-normal conditions will possibly continue into August.

Pacific Power is leading the way in wildfire prevention, investing close to $70 million over the past five years in strengthening its system in Oregon, working hard to protect customers from the risks associated with wildfires. The company’s prevention practices are focused on three main areas.

  • Situational Awareness: We use 24/7 monitoring and forecasting, along with analysis of 30 years of data, to both show the big picture and provide a day-to-day look at wildfire risk across the states we serve.
  • Operational Practices: We have practices in place to help keep our customers and communities safe, by employing sensitive protective settings on powerlines when elevated risk conditions exist; conducting enhanced vegetation management; closely monitoring all fires near our equipment; maintaining the ability to conduct a Public Safety Power Shutoff anywhere across our service area; and by having the ability to proactively de-energize our lines when a wildfire approaches our equipment.
  • System Strengthening: We have invested millions of dollars in infrastructure enhancements that reduce risk and prevent wildfires, concentrated in geographic areas at greatest risk of wildfires. This includes rebuilding lines using covered conductor and adding more sensitive equipment that can de-energize power lines within fractions of a second when interference is detected.

“The safety of our customers and communities is our top priority,” said Allen Berreth, Pacific Power’s vice president of operations. “We have made significant investments in preventing wildfires, and are committed to this ongoing mission.”

Even as electric providers partner with federal, state and local agencies and Tribes to plan and prepare for the upcoming wildfire season, preparedness is a year-round effort, and everyone has a part to play when it comes to readiness.

Resources are available to help every Oregonian take steps to plan ahead and be ready for wildfire-related power outages. At wildfire.oregon.gov, Oregonians can find tips to stay informed, make a plan and trim trees and plants to create defensible spaces to help slow the spread of wildfire.

Pacific Power customers can visit PacificPower.net/WildfireSafety for resources and information, including an outage preparation checklist for residential and business customers, an interactive map outlining potential public safety power shutoff areas and the company’s 2025 Wildfire Mitigation Plan.

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