PG&E begins cutting power to 940,0000 customers in Calif.
California's largest utility company has begun an intentional power cut to what could become a total of 940,000 customers this weekend.
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California's largest utility company has begun an intentional power cut to what could become a total of 940,000 customers this weekend.
California's largest utility is working to restore power to tens of thousands of customers after another round of intentional power cuts in Northern California.
Many Californians are angry as the state's largest power utility continues to intentionally cut off electricity for hundreds of thousands of customers in an attempt to avoid sparking wildfires.
Pacific Gas & Electric began Wednesday to cut electricity to homes and businesses in more than a dozen areas as the California utility tries to avert wildfires.
Just as firefighters got a grip on a blaze that tore through the swanky Pacific Palisades, other Californians are at risk of unpredictable wildfires this week.
Winds as strong as those of a tropical storm pummeled New England on Thursday, as a storm known as a bomb cyclone knocked out power and promised to disrupt travel in the region through the end of the workweek.
The death toll from Typhoon Hagibis has risen to 74 in Japan, as thousands of residents remain without power or water and evening temperatures hover around 15 degrees Celsius (59 Fahrenheit), according to public broadcaster NHK.
When the power went out for almost 800,000 Californians this week to prevent wildfires, it was not the first time. And many are left wondering whether it will be the last.
When Wendy Bedolla got into her Tesla Model 3 Thursday morning there was a message waiting for her.
An angry California Gov. Gavin Newsom slammed the state's largest utility over its power shutoffs, saying they're the result of years of mismanagement and greed.