Xcel Energy says it relies on industry best practices and its own experience in beefing up wildfire mitigation plans for its operating companies.
In Colorado, where its affiliate faces nearly 300 lawsuits after the 2021 Marshall fire destroyed more than 1,000 homes, killed two people and caused more than $2 billion in property damage, Xcel recently filed a $1.9 billion wildfire mitigation plan that updates the previous one. It will serve as a template for wildfire mitigation plans in Texas and New Mexico and the company’s other states.
“I’m really proud of what we’re going to accomplish on the operational side to provide the real-time risk reduction that we need today to give us the time to make the necessary enhancements and system resiliency and hardening for our system over time,” Xcel CEO Bob Frenzel told financial analysts during the company’s second-quarter earnings call Aug. 1.
The Colorado plan integrates industry experience, incorporates evolving risk assessment methodologies, adds new technology and expands the scope, pace and scale of programs reducing wildfire risk, Frenzel said. It also benefited from the “hard work of the people that have come in front of us in California,” he said.
“We expect to dramatically reduce our wildfire risk based on their experiences and doing some of the lessons learned from all of those organizations. But that shouldn’t be taken as anything other than a huge focus that we also have in Texas and in [New] Mexico around our plans there,” Frenzel said.
Xcel has been linked to February’s Smokehouse Creek fire in the Texas Panhandle, the largest in state history. It has acknowledged its infrastructure likely started the fire. The company plans to file a resiliency plan in Texas for its Southwestern Public Service subsidiary later this year.
The Minneapolis-based company reported second-quarter earnings of $302 million ($0.54/share), as compared to the same period a year ago of $288 million ($0.52/share). Xcel’s ongoing earnings reflected the recovery of increased infrastructure investments and warmer than normal weather, partially offset by increased depreciation, interest charges and operations and maintenance expenses.
The company reaffirmed its year-end guidance of $3.50-3.60/share. It has met year-end expectations 19 straight years.
Xcel’s share price closed at $59.75, up 2.5% after the earnings release.