It seems like an odd quirk of liability law that all of the fire damage is blamed on PG+E if the initial spark that started the fire was PG+E’s fault. Surely some blame lies elsewhere as well. I think homeowners need to be paying fire insurance costs proportional to fire risk to properly incentivize fire protection (and I say this as a California homeowner in a somewhat fire prone area).
In the end, PG+E is regulated so heavily that any costs they pay will basically just be passed on to consumers. The solution to the increased fire risk is not “blame PG+E”.
There's a long discussion in Coase's classic "The Problem of Social Cost" about the apportionment of liability between railroads and landowners adjacent to the railways when fires are started by sparks from trains.
Basically Coase says that it's not necessarily the most economically efficient to blame the railroad that created the sparks, and that it depends on other factors (in the super-simple formulation that people sometimes attribute to Coase, this could include who could most cheaply act to mitigate the fires).
I think Coase would agree with you that we can't automatically assume that blaming PG&E and making PG&E pay for all the damages will lead to the most efficient outcomes for California as a whole in the future.
> PG+E is regulated so heavily that any costs they pay will basically just be passed on to consumers.
That assumes they survive. Their market cap is $12b and some cost estimates are nearing that, but their own insurance will cover a lot of the costs... for now.
Endlessly increasing rates works when consumers have no alternatives. But this is in California, solar just gets more and more viable.
Fire insurance, like earthquake and flood insurance, does not work because of the scope of damages. Insurance works by pooling risk and taking income from low risk areas to pay for high risk ones. Due to the scope of wildfires, fire insurance is untenable.
The solution to this fire is absolutely to blame pg and e and its custoners (yes this includes me). This is the logical conclusion. The only thing preventing us from doing this is a refusal to count ourselves complicit in this fire.
The solution furthermore is to legislate to remove the barriers to competition that California has set up. Even though I try to do the right thing by buying my electricity from something other than pg and e, I am -- by government sanctioned monopoly -- forced to pay of and e for 'distribution'. I put this in quotes because I am not charged this fee if I buy direct from pg and e. The state allows this non competitive monopoly. When I confronted my congressman, his response to why the state allows this is that the ' pg and e lobby is strong'
If the state cannot preserve a competitive market for energy, then the state needs to seize energy production. Monopoly is not capitalism and it is not the free market and it is not freedom. A state run solution is very non ideal (I say this as a libertarian), but it is the best among all others.
As it is right now, people in England are able to buy shares in my utility and are more incentivized to cut costs and increase profit even to the point of causing harm that will never affect them.
This is a strawman. I do not like the current administration, but attempting to blame everything on them is intellectually lazy.
The fires in California are not caused due to bad budget cuts over the past few years, but rather the mistaken environmentalist policy of not allowing controlled burns for the last 100 years and extinguishing natural fires out of needless heroics to save species that are now in ever more need of saving: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/californ...
The "10 am" policy, and the opposition to controlled burns are not coming from environmentalists (Just try googling "endagered species fire"... https://www.mass.gov/news/fire-prescribed-for-habitat-manage... ... many endangered species rely on fire, and we have known this for 50 years).
It's property owners who are opposed to prescribed burns, because there is a risk of prescribed burns getting out of control. From wikipedia: "In 1978, the Forest Service abandoned the 10:00 am policy in favor of a new policy that encouraged the use of wildland fire by prescription.[1][13]
Three events between 1978 and 1988 precipitated a major fire use policy review in 1989: the Ouzel fire in Rocky Mountain National Park, the Yellowstone fires of 1988 in and around Yellowstone National Park, and the Canyon Creek fire in the Bob Marshall Wilderness on the Lewis and Clark National Forest. In all three cases, monitored fires burned until they threatened developed areas."
those events caused a backlash against controlled burns, because obviously it's hard to sell the public that some destruction of property now is better than more of it later.
How do the insurance companies afford to insure places like in Florida and the lower East Coast, which seem to keep getting hammered with hurricanes year after year, getting worse year after year? And... can they keep up this pace? Apparently in 2017, fires "only" cost insurance companies ~$14B, out of ~$132B paid out. The majority was caused by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. 2017 was the 2nd costliest year on record in terms of natural disasters (have to wait for '18 numbers released in Jan). So why is fire insurance untenable while hurricane ins. isn't?
And, as I said above, wildfire is covered in home insurance policies. However, the argument was about wildfire specific insurance. That is untenable since it would cause large insurance runs every year.
Can you explain why wild fire insurance is not tenable? Here in Canada all home insurance include wildfire insurance.
All insurers have to do is to pool risk and diversify across geography. No way only California has homes near forests? There’s also reinsurers to pool even more risk.
Not a problem, that's why the very, very large business of reinsurance exists. You don't have to be nationwide to effectively pool risk and diversify across many industries and nations.
But someone operating solely in places without fire risk could easily undercut the larger insurers, driving rates down in that area. It's good and all to spread out the risk, but it's better not to take on risk. So in the end, those living in risk-factor areas will pay for it one way or another.
Indeed. Wildfires aren't really about drought so much as they're about abundant kindling (e.g. smaller trees not already burnt). Wildfires are essential to keeping forests healthy, and by trying to stop them entirely we've only made them more frequent and destructive.
In flood plains you are required to buy insurance, in some parts of the us. It seems reasonable to determine fire risk and require insurance if you are in a 50 year burn zone, though determining that is probably the rub.
With all respect I don’t see how this changes anything but shifting who pays.
How is it better to pool risks to the group rather than the individual paying a for that risk? The US already has a huge problem with coastal real estate and federal insurance of coastal developments. Why would we introduce that at scale?
Why should the collective pay for individual choices? It’s not like the society got together and made people move into fire prone areas.
I am not trying to draw parallels to health insurance which has many ethical questions that drive deep consideration, but I don’t understand why asking for the group to insure individual risk that is fundamentally founded in individual choice is in any way necessarily better?
How is it better to pool risks to the group rather
than the individual paying a for that risk?
Imagine a population of 10,000 people, 1000 live in fire-prone areas, and 10 will have their $100,000 house destroyed by a wildfire for a total cost of $1,000,000.
(1) If the state pays for wildfire damage, the 10000 people will pay $100 each whether they're in a fire-prone area or not.
(2) With home insurance including wildfire insurance, insurers set individual premiums based on their best risk models, and the 1000 people in fire-prone areas will pay $1000 each, whether their home burns down or not.
(3). If there is neither (1) nor (2), the 10 people whose houses were destroyed will pay $100,000 each.
Some people would say that (2) is the morally correct level of cost distribution, as (1) unfairly subsidises risky behaviour, while (3) bankrupts disaster victims at random.
> The solution furthermore is to legislate to remove the barriers to competition that California has set up.
While I think you’re generally on point, this misses the mark a bit. We don’t want more transmission lines running in CA, right? We don’t want lots of little companies increasing the risk of fire by managing lines independently and the one that’s losing then doesn’t have the means to maintain those lines.
We might want competition at the generation point, but the transmission lines should be a monopoly. What needs to be fixed on the transmission is that there should not be a profit in maintaining them, bc the profit comes from lack of maintenance. The last three disasters caused by PG&E, can basically be boiled down to a maintenance problem, or lack of.
All the transmission lines and maintenance should be transferred to the state, and the profit motive, by not maintaining the infrastructure properly, be removed.
Again, competition in power generation (and storage) is good, competition in transmission is bad.
> We might want competition at the generation point, but the transmission lines should be a monopoly.
A perfectly reasonable argument.
If a certain market needs to be a monopoly, then it ought to be state controlled, like the FCC's monopoly on air waves. That is the only way to ensure free-market capitalism.
The purpose of the market is to create an efficient society. Indeed, it is the best vehicle to do so. However, a market means that there is choice.
In the absence of a market, the next best alternative is democratic control, best exercised via government.
> We don’t want more transmission lines running in CA, right?
Not in the air. Luckily, you can put them under ground.
> The last three disasters caused by PG&E,
This is willful ignorance. I'd be happy to look over companies that simply had maintenance issues. However, PG&E has proven to not only be negligent, but malicious. They've poisoned people knowingly, without disclosure. They've covered up negligence over the explosions of city blocks.
I am not anti-business. Despite its many issues, Southern California edison is a much better company.
PG&E though is -- quite obviously -- quite a bit more nefarious than most utilities.
> competition in transmission is bad.
No it's not. Competition would always be good. Your argument was that competition in transmission was not possible.
No that’s exactly what we want. We want the free market to create efficiency without entrenched regulation, which could lead to some short-term increase in risk. But what you really want is to price in the risk, and the only way to do that is to remove government protections of individual corporations so that the free market can operate. Little companies increasing the risks of fire is a misnomer because competition and a truly free market would crush those companies and eliminate that problem faster than you could think of a solution. It’s only when you entrench a bureaucracy that you end up with problems like PG&E - a company that doesn’t have to deal with real consequences because it’s political connections will protect it.
What your describing sounds fantastic and is politically expeditious because there is less risk in backing the prevailing methodology, but it is not improvement.
Competition in transmission is good, because alternatives like alternative energy would completely displace these systems and technology advancements would be available and legal - unlike the current insanity.
You know how you can’t put in an oversized solar system and sell power back to the grid, even if you can afford to? Did you notice that the grid is super inefficient because it’s got a limited number of highly centralized generation sources? No? Well that’s the consequence of ownership of the transmission lines. If you own the last mile you own the network. And if you also own the politicians who can protect your last mile interests, why would you invest in change?
I did consider your point, and in general, I agree with it in most cases. To me though, it’s like the road system in US. The transmission lines are very much like the shared cost of maintaining the interstate highway system.
I agree that there are advancements in transmission needed. All of your points are correct, but I disagree that the risks of the free market are the way to get there.
I just drove from SF to LA to let my kids have some some fresh air (ironic, right?). It took us 4 hours, all the way to the grapevine (just past Bakersfield) to not see the smoke, to have more than a few miles of visibility. The cost of the risks from an improperly maintained grid would be horrendous.
I’m not an electrical engineer, and my knowledge of how the grid operates is limited, I’ll admit, I’m just incapable of seeing a free market solution here, where failure can result in a catastrophe like we’re experiencing here now. As I understand the interconnected nature of the grid, it needs centralized management to control the transmission system. I luckily have the means to get my family to safety (we came back yesterday as the air is finally starting to clear), but that’s not an option for many people. I don’t believe the free market you speak of could ever exist, and I don’t think it’s worth watching things deteriorate to find out.
Anyone know how Texas handles this?
I know that they have many competing power utilities and people can choose which one to sign up with, but how is transmission managed?
The insurance business model is not about distributing costs from high risk customers more evenly with low risk customers, but in distributing costs more evenly between unlucky customers and lucky ones [1]. After all, most insurance companies will access the risk of their customers and assign premiums accordingly - your insurance premium is the expected value of payouts, plus overhead, plus profit.
Wildfires can destroy large swaths of land, and they are certain to occur every year, but not at every susceptible house. My mother has lived in a house in a high fire risk area of Northern California since the early 1980s, but her particular neighborhood hasn't burnt. Neither has the houses of my father-in-law, grandma-in-law, and two brothers, which are all in similarly high risk areas of Nor-Cal. Likewise, in March, nobody would have predicted that Paradise, CA would all but be destroyed, nor would they have predicted the damage in Santa Rosa the previous March. But we could still have concluded that those areas are at risk.
An insurance company can assign a value to your property (in fact, they probably already have), can estimate the probability of loss due to forrest fire, compute the expected value of payouts, add overhead, add profit, and sell you a policy. Damages are correlated on a local level, but not on a statewide level - that there was a fire in Paradise, CA doesn't increase the odds that Quincy or Fort Bragg will experience a fire too this year.
With fire damages in the tens billions per year but maybe only millions of insured to spread around the cost, people might not like the resulting premiums, but they can choose to lower their risks (and hence insurance premiums) or roll the dice.
[1]: And in managing the large pile of money you need to have on hand in case you end up with more unlucky customers than expected.
I live just a couple of miles from the Hayward fault which is "scheduled" to unleash an M7 earthquake any day now. My insurance costs (which includes earthquake and fire) is about $25/month with a $500 deductible. If a $25/month charge is "untenable" I think people have bigger financial problems than affording insurance.
I'm in the same area and am paying thousands per year just for basic home owners (no earthquake). Earthquake bids I've seen were thousands more with 15% deductibles (hundreds of thousands of dollars). Who is your insurance provider?
You have a fundamental misunderstanding of insurance. It doesn't require shifting income from low risk to high risk areas. Rather paying for the risk in each area is spread out over time. It's completely possible to provide sustainable fire insurance by charging customers in each area based on actual risk, and then using reinsurance to spread the risk pool out among multiple insurers.
Of course some customers might not like having to pay market rates for fire insurance.
Disclaimer: I barely survived the Camp Fire, with all the credit to our neighbors for letting us know.
That's a chick-little, strawman and blame-the-victim argument. The issues are:
1. PGE likely started the fire. They should be held responsible for this specific incident, not passing the buck to ratepayers or anyone else.
2. PGE is corrupting and coopting liability when it needs to pay the penalties for its actions, not pass the buck. This is separate from 1. because it indicates a greater decay of liability and they're insulating themselves to gradually become an untouchable mafia.
3. In order to get 2., removing SIG, PAC and large private monies, and all those who benefit from them, from politics is imperative.
4. Paradise is a tiny town that doesn't do a very good job with code enforcement. My mom had to mobilize the neighbors to get an abandoned propery's owner to mow their 7 ft tall, dried weeds and remove fire other hazards like an abandoned house with a tree crashed through it, but then the institutionalized owner later allowed a random tree-trimmer to dump dozens of piles of pine sawdust and logs on that property. SMH.
5. "Regulations" aren't an uniform obelisk to scapegoat that you implied. One regulation maybe advantageous or harmful uniquely to each and every affected group, depending. So don't even start spreading the tired, libertarian, utopian refrains like "If only there were no regulations, markets solve everything," which is utter horseshit. Regulations can and do work but only if the governed demand it and refuse to allow the rich and their corporations to have their way.
It's the POLR for most former/current homeowners to move to where professional town managers exist rather than deal with small-town incompetence like the bumblers in Paradise or Butte's Sheriff Kory's flimsy excuse for not activating the EAS, which likely caused the needless deaths of hundreds of disabled and elderly people.
I'm definitely in favour of PG&E getting hit hard for this one due to what appears to be gross negligence on their part.
_But_, doesn't the liability also, in part, apply to the state and/or the federal government? How far did the fire unnecessarily spread? Was the land in the area being properly maintained, with good fire breaks, routine controlled burns etc, or are they skimping like they have been all over the country?
California the land of sky high housing & rent, insane deadly forest fires, homelessness like no other state, landslides, earthquakes... it just doesn't sound very appealing.
What are the positives ... chasing and potentially realizing your creative (music/film) or tech dreams there? That can be done in other cities like Nashville or possibly close to here in a few years with Amazon building in Crystal City, VA (other big tech companies may follow). Well love to hear the positives of living in California!
"California the land of sky high housing & rent, insane deadly forest fires, homelessness like no other state, landslides, earthquakes... it just doesn't sound very appealing."
This is just sample bias. California is the size of NY all the way down to Florida.
If something bad happens on the west coast it has a 60% chance of being in CA but if it happens on the east coast it could be in VA, MD, DC, FL, GA, SC, NC, WV, DE
I thought the reason Hollywood was in California is because of the wide range of climates and shooting locations. Beach, farm, desert, and alpine, all just a few hours drive away. We're a bit short on tundra, though.
I lived the first 22 years of my life in Northern Virginia before moving to California. Let me tell you the things I don't miss:
1) Freezing winters with snow and ice
2) Scorching summers
3) Hours-long drive to the beach
4) Lack of vegetarian food (though that's been changing in recent years!)
5) The politics (extremely politically driven people from the entire spectrum wind up in the DMV).
Of course there's plenty I miss, but just depending on what you value the DMV is not that much better than California.
Kindly keep the conversation productive - I don't tell my relatives to abandon the Florida they dearly love when hurricanes strike, even though we both know they'll just strike again and again. They have their reasons for loving and rebuilding the place they call home.
Instead, I wish them the best of luck repairing their homes and send my condolences (occasionally monetary aid).
This is really unrelated to anything else in this thread and it could just be trolling but... Are you kidding?
Maybe you've always grown up in nicer areas than I have and don't realize how bad it can be. Sure, rent in Michigan is cheap, near Detroit - which is appealing all the way up till there's police tape in your backyard from a shooting. You pay less taxes and you feel it every morning when you drive to work, because the roads are less maintained than the flavor of the week JavaScript frameworks from 2012, which BY THE WAY you almost certainly will need to drive to work in Michigan, since the jobs tend to be far away and public transport would be great if it were supposed to be the punchline to a joke. The restaurant scene in NorCal is not the best in the world or country, but unless you want Mediterranean food it's nearly unilaterally better than anywhere I've been in Michigan. Michigan does not have the harshest winters by far, but I'd almost rather choke to death in smoke than deal with another Michigan winter, sliding around on the ice trying not to crash my car while freezing my ass off. Speaking of which, How about Michigan car insurance? It's pretty hard to put into words how godawful the car insurance situation is, but I paid more than double for worse insurance in Michigan and that's reason enough to hate it.
Wildfires are terrible. Homelessness is bad. But the rent prices, well, they're high for a reason; it's a great place to live despite all of the setbacks. And maybe there's a better set of trade-offs elsewhere in the U.S., but I get the opportunity to work with some of the best engineers I've ever met and that's pretty hard to find anywhere else.
So yes. It is a bummer when the rent comes out of my paycheck each month, it is upsetting when I hear the death tolls and see the wildfire smoke. But, I also remember where I came from and frankly I'm choosing to stay for now.
you were in no way asking in a nice way. You were incredibly condescending in a post about a natural disaster striking the area. Don't be disingenuous.
If you're genuinely asking (quite irreverent to ask in this thread, I must say), what keeps me here personally are its people. Californians are a passionate folk who are without a doubt the most non-judgmental Americans I've ever encountered as an immigrant, and I've lived in many states. It feels like here, regardless of your background, gender, etc. you can truly be who you want to be - as long as you love to work!
Why would you live in the united states? It has fires, tornadoes, earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, landslides, volcanoes, tsunamis, blizzards, heat waves, droughts...
If you list all the disasters in a big area, your list gets big fast, but no individual place actually has all those things, unless perhaps if Moses shows up to intimidate a Pharaoh.
Isn't one theory of granting a government monopoly franchise that it allows pooling of risks related to that activity? PG&E is, in some sense, the government's insurance plan.
Other general liability insurance is now priced for damages that cannot be assigned or recovered. But "no fault fire insurance" would shift cost from the government-backed-utility-rate-pool to private insurers.
It's hard to imagine that such a shift would be more efficient, in part because PG&E is in the best position to assess its own risk -- and buy its own insurance and reinsurance.
Surely, somewhere in the utility, someone bought a SwissRe or Loyds policy against freak catastrophic loss.
It's hard to imagine that such a shift would
be more efficient
There was an article linked here the other day [1] that said homes can be designed to withstand wildfires through choice of materials and vegetation clearing.
If the intervention you want to incentivise is replacing wooden roofs and removing fuel near the house, raising insurance bills for people who don't do that could be one way of doing it.
Of course, there's also a case for incentivising not starting the fire in the first place.
I saw a picture of Paradise after it burned. It was remarkable, the houses were completely gone but the trees were still standing all around. There's something wrong with how we build and maintain our structures in fire prone areas.
The trees have evolved to withstand fires very well, using bark over 10cm thick, dropping the lower needles during fire. Perhaps it is possible to cover buildings in similar isolating material as well. However, people would still need to be evacuated due to the lethal smoke.
> "I think homeowners need to be paying fire insurance costs proportional to fire risk"
Wildfires are already covered by property re/insurance. The problem is that risk is badly priced, as modeling for wildfires is currently very underdeveloped compared to hurricanes or earthquakes. There has been no wildfire event of a similar magnitude of property losses in recent history.
Shameless plug: At tensorflight we are actually starting some prototyping of wildfire risk models for the insurance industry based on satellite imagery.
A house is insured. PG&E is insured. My house burns down, my insurance pays for it. Then they sue PG&E to recover that payout.
As far as who is at fault: a fire needs a fuel, oxygen and a spark. It can be argued that a spark is going to happen somewhere, and mitigating it is more about not having the fuel so that it can chain and spread.
Liability law is at least consistent, even if I end up disagreeing with the result. When my (now ex-) wife was in law school, one if the sample cards they studied was an arsonist where the fire had met up with an unrelated one. The arsonist was found liable for all the subsequent damage from the combined fire rather than an approximation of his "contribution" despite the being no disagreement that some of the damage would have happened anyway.
In another case construction crews finding were found liable for a nearby mink farm's lost of income when the sounds freaked out the animals and they ruined their coats, because blowing stuff up, even done legally, is considered a high liability task.
At least those are my recollections of the decisions, it has been a while and I didn't study them myself.
Interesting. In law school, I learned that the exact opposite way--the arsonist wasn't responsible for any damage, because the bigger fire would have consumed the target house anyway. (Edit: I believe the proper term is "superseding cause". Note that with all things involving case law, this is highly jurisdictionally dependent. For example, in California, intentional acts can be superseding causes but not unintentional/negligent acts or acts of god.)
With the mink case, the issue wasn't that blowing stuff up is a high-liability task. The issue was that it was a nuisance. Nuisance activities can be legal, and even first-in-time (like say, cow farms predating housing developments). Very nutshell version, but basically the issue with nuisance law is that the activity's effects transcend the boundaries of one's property and so the doer can be held liable for those effects.
I want to know if backburning is a common practice in California, or in the USA at all.
In Australia a big part of a Firey's job is running controlled burns in the (relatively) low fire risk season to keep the amount of flammable material around cities and property to a minimum.
It is a continuation, in a way, of a much more ancient indiginous practice of regularly burning large swathes of bush. It is very much a part of the natural ecosystem here.
It happens a fair amount here in the hills of Southern California, although at a much smaller scale than I understand happens down under. The goal here seems to be to burn out a buffer around homes rather than using fire to manage the whole forest.
The flora is quite different, too — a coastal live oak takes way longer to grow back than a eucalyptus (and is also less ridiculously flammable when established). So burning huge swaths here would generally not be a great thing.
So controlled burns are definitely done, but it's difficult. There's issues with air quality after a burn, waiting for ideal conditions, and sometimes even losing control of the burns. Don't know how that compares with Australia.
All of these things are issues in Australia, though out of control prescribed burns are very uncommon.
Basically all of the northern areas in the Northern Territory are burnt once every two years or so.
One thing to consider is that Indigenous Australians have been doing regular burns for tens of thousands of years. It's pretty well understood how the land burns, how often it needs to be burnt and what good/safe conditions look like.
99% Invisible has some amazing episodes on this topic. Apparently controlled burns used to be a tjing, until society collectively decided all wildfire is bad and started the abstinence approach of sorts. As a result fires are a little less frequent, but much much much bigger when they do happen.
And they’ve been happening more and more anyway.
Wildfire is a natural part of the ecosystem in CA as well. Forests need it to stay healthy and clear the underbrush. But humans decided fire is bad because we like to live in fire areas.
Im a wldland firefighter from the northern Rockies, just returned from a deployment to the Woolsey incident (LA and Ventura counties).
Yes, prescribed burns are common in the off season for all fire districts. However, CalFire has some unique challenges [1] that most of the other states do not have to deal with when it comes to air quality and sufficient water conditions during their shrinking off season.
https://www.kqed.org/science/1927354/controlled-burns-can-he...
I'll add statistics for the 2018 fire season that includes southern and northern California [1] at a combined 55,000 acres versus the northwest (WA, OR) of a similar geographic size [2] and atmospheric conditions to Northern CA at over 100,000 acres in prescribed burns.
Proper forest management, including controlled burns, have always been difficult due to the politically powerful ignorant.
Because controlled burns experienced increasing friction, policy evolved to a "let-burn" policy for naturally-started fires (brush gets cleared without anyone having to take responsibility). Problem is, if an area is unnaturally overgrown, fire can have disproportionate severity and become impossible to constrain.
Would you please stop it with the flamewar comments and political battle comments on HN? It's not what this site is for, we've warned you before, and if you keep doing it we're going to have to ban you. Please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.
The ideological rhetoric. It wasn't a thoughtful comment, which is what we want here.
In case it's helpful: people sometimes think that we enforce this standard because we're uncomfortable with intensity and only want (say) a nice and civil bourgeois discussion. And they make legitimate objections to constraining discussion for this reason. But it isn't our reason at all. Rather, it's because of the systemic effects such comments have on a large public forum like HN. Experience teaches that they lead rapidly to lower-quality threads, in which people drop thoughtfulness, start to yell, and eventually just try to blast and hurt each other. Since the whole point of HN is to try to sustain a higher quality level on the internet, we have to moderate such comments rigorously.
So when we moderate HN, we're not thinking so much of the specific comment we're replying to, but what that type of comment leads to. I don't usually explain this because, as you can see from this post here, it takes too long.
> I don't usually explain this because, as you can see from this post here, it takes too long.
Wouldn't the solution for this type of problem be to write it down only once and thoroughly in a blog post, and then refer to it? Or a number of posts, and you only post the pointer.
I've had that idea in general for public forums, that there should be one thoroughly explained list of aspects and view points, and when there is a problem with a post you simply moderate it with "That
is a #42".
It would seem so, but something in me resists reducing things that way. It feels incongruent with HN's principle of intellectual curiosity.
I do sometimes link to previous HN comments, but only ad hoc. And I have to remember things in order to link to them, which prevents it from getting totally static.
If someone pours gasoline over everything, but someone else lights the match, why do we put all the blame on the match lighter? Building flammable homes right next to super dry, brush filled forests is just an invitation for disaster.
Look at aerial views above the Oakland Hills before and after the 1991 fire. Roads choked with illegally parked cars, badly overgrown brush, etc. Almost 3,300 home's destroyed.
Look at the same streets now on a typical Fall day: the exact same risk factors in similar proportions. A similar fire now would kill twice as many.
Note that PG&E is being held liable under current law for fires started at the site of it's equipment. Regardless of whether or not PG&E was at fault due to lack of maintenance. So when PG&E is found liable then the public and media often conflate it with being at fault. Two different things.
Note that SB 901, the recent PGE bailout over last year's fires (Coffee Park, etc.), is illegally being applied retroactively to this year's fires (see George Avalos' article in the Mercury).
I feel like your statement is misleading. Regulators have come out and said they don't want PG&E to go bankrupt. PG&E and the regulators are probably both supportive of extending the existing legislation to cover 2018.
However I am not aware of PG&E or regulators having acted illegally. Publicly stating an opinion before taking action is not illegal.
Plus the bailouts are generally being used to fund PG&E's rebuild on fires where they weren't at fault (from a common sense perspective) but were found liable under California law (see my earlier statement).
People are angry and want someone to blame even tho this was a natural disaster. With current laws, PG&E is being painted as the bad guy and are stuck between a rock and a hard place.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 179 ms ] threadIn the end, PG+E is regulated so heavily that any costs they pay will basically just be passed on to consumers. The solution to the increased fire risk is not “blame PG+E”.
http://home.cerge-ei.cz/ortmann/UpcesCourse/Coase%20-%20The%...
Basically Coase says that it's not necessarily the most economically efficient to blame the railroad that created the sparks, and that it depends on other factors (in the super-simple formulation that people sometimes attribute to Coase, this could include who could most cheaply act to mitigate the fires).
I think Coase would agree with you that we can't automatically assume that blaming PG&E and making PG&E pay for all the damages will lead to the most efficient outcomes for California as a whole in the future.
That assumes they survive. Their market cap is $12b and some cost estimates are nearing that, but their own insurance will cover a lot of the costs... for now.
Endlessly increasing rates works when consumers have no alternatives. But this is in California, solar just gets more and more viable.
The solution to this fire is absolutely to blame pg and e and its custoners (yes this includes me). This is the logical conclusion. The only thing preventing us from doing this is a refusal to count ourselves complicit in this fire.
The solution furthermore is to legislate to remove the barriers to competition that California has set up. Even though I try to do the right thing by buying my electricity from something other than pg and e, I am -- by government sanctioned monopoly -- forced to pay of and e for 'distribution'. I put this in quotes because I am not charged this fee if I buy direct from pg and e. The state allows this non competitive monopoly. When I confronted my congressman, his response to why the state allows this is that the ' pg and e lobby is strong'
If the state cannot preserve a competitive market for energy, then the state needs to seize energy production. Monopoly is not capitalism and it is not the free market and it is not freedom. A state run solution is very non ideal (I say this as a libertarian), but it is the best among all others.
As it is right now, people in England are able to buy shares in my utility and are more incentivized to cut costs and increase profit even to the point of causing harm that will never affect them.
Funding was cut last year and boom we have back to back years of fires.
The fires in California are not caused due to bad budget cuts over the past few years, but rather the mistaken environmentalist policy of not allowing controlled burns for the last 100 years and extinguishing natural fires out of needless heroics to save species that are now in ever more need of saving: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/californ...
It's property owners who are opposed to prescribed burns, because there is a risk of prescribed burns getting out of control. From wikipedia: "In 1978, the Forest Service abandoned the 10:00 am policy in favor of a new policy that encouraged the use of wildland fire by prescription.[1][13]
Three events between 1978 and 1988 precipitated a major fire use policy review in 1989: the Ouzel fire in Rocky Mountain National Park, the Yellowstone fires of 1988 in and around Yellowstone National Park, and the Canyon Creek fire in the Bob Marshall Wilderness on the Lewis and Clark National Forest. In all three cases, monitored fires burned until they threatened developed areas."
those events caused a backlash against controlled burns, because obviously it's hard to sell the public that some destruction of property now is better than more of it later.
How do the insurance companies afford to insure places like in Florida and the lower East Coast, which seem to keep getting hammered with hurricanes year after year, getting worse year after year? And... can they keep up this pace? Apparently in 2017, fires "only" cost insurance companies ~$14B, out of ~$132B paid out. The majority was caused by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. 2017 was the 2nd costliest year on record in terms of natural disasters (have to wait for '18 numbers released in Jan). So why is fire insurance untenable while hurricane ins. isn't?
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-insurance-aon/2017...
And, as I said above, wildfire is covered in home insurance policies. However, the argument was about wildfire specific insurance. That is untenable since it would cause large insurance runs every year.
All insurers have to do is to pool risk and diversify across geography. No way only California has homes near forests? There’s also reinsurers to pool even more risk.
Not all insurers are nation-wide.
Home insurance includes wildfires, but let's limit ourselves to wildfire-specific insurance, which was the issue at hand.
How is it better to pool risks to the group rather than the individual paying a for that risk? The US already has a huge problem with coastal real estate and federal insurance of coastal developments. Why would we introduce that at scale?
Why should the collective pay for individual choices? It’s not like the society got together and made people move into fire prone areas.
I am not trying to draw parallels to health insurance which has many ethical questions that drive deep consideration, but I don’t understand why asking for the group to insure individual risk that is fundamentally founded in individual choice is in any way necessarily better?
(1) If the state pays for wildfire damage, the 10000 people will pay $100 each whether they're in a fire-prone area or not.
(2) With home insurance including wildfire insurance, insurers set individual premiums based on their best risk models, and the 1000 people in fire-prone areas will pay $1000 each, whether their home burns down or not.
(3). If there is neither (1) nor (2), the 10 people whose houses were destroyed will pay $100,000 each.
Some people would say that (2) is the morally correct level of cost distribution, as (1) unfairly subsidises risky behaviour, while (3) bankrupts disaster victims at random.
While I think you’re generally on point, this misses the mark a bit. We don’t want more transmission lines running in CA, right? We don’t want lots of little companies increasing the risk of fire by managing lines independently and the one that’s losing then doesn’t have the means to maintain those lines.
We might want competition at the generation point, but the transmission lines should be a monopoly. What needs to be fixed on the transmission is that there should not be a profit in maintaining them, bc the profit comes from lack of maintenance. The last three disasters caused by PG&E, can basically be boiled down to a maintenance problem, or lack of.
All the transmission lines and maintenance should be transferred to the state, and the profit motive, by not maintaining the infrastructure properly, be removed.
Again, competition in power generation (and storage) is good, competition in transmission is bad.
A perfectly reasonable argument.
If a certain market needs to be a monopoly, then it ought to be state controlled, like the FCC's monopoly on air waves. That is the only way to ensure free-market capitalism.
The purpose of the market is to create an efficient society. Indeed, it is the best vehicle to do so. However, a market means that there is choice.
In the absence of a market, the next best alternative is democratic control, best exercised via government.
> We don’t want more transmission lines running in CA, right?
Not in the air. Luckily, you can put them under ground.
> The last three disasters caused by PG&E,
This is willful ignorance. I'd be happy to look over companies that simply had maintenance issues. However, PG&E has proven to not only be negligent, but malicious. They've poisoned people knowingly, without disclosure. They've covered up negligence over the explosions of city blocks.
I am not anti-business. Despite its many issues, Southern California edison is a much better company.
PG&E though is -- quite obviously -- quite a bit more nefarious than most utilities.
> competition in transmission is bad.
No it's not. Competition would always be good. Your argument was that competition in transmission was not possible.
What your describing sounds fantastic and is politically expeditious because there is less risk in backing the prevailing methodology, but it is not improvement.
Competition in transmission is good, because alternatives like alternative energy would completely displace these systems and technology advancements would be available and legal - unlike the current insanity.
You know how you can’t put in an oversized solar system and sell power back to the grid, even if you can afford to? Did you notice that the grid is super inefficient because it’s got a limited number of highly centralized generation sources? No? Well that’s the consequence of ownership of the transmission lines. If you own the last mile you own the network. And if you also own the politicians who can protect your last mile interests, why would you invest in change?
I agree that there are advancements in transmission needed. All of your points are correct, but I disagree that the risks of the free market are the way to get there.
I just drove from SF to LA to let my kids have some some fresh air (ironic, right?). It took us 4 hours, all the way to the grapevine (just past Bakersfield) to not see the smoke, to have more than a few miles of visibility. The cost of the risks from an improperly maintained grid would be horrendous.
I’m not an electrical engineer, and my knowledge of how the grid operates is limited, I’ll admit, I’m just incapable of seeing a free market solution here, where failure can result in a catastrophe like we’re experiencing here now. As I understand the interconnected nature of the grid, it needs centralized management to control the transmission system. I luckily have the means to get my family to safety (we came back yesterday as the air is finally starting to clear), but that’s not an option for many people. I don’t believe the free market you speak of could ever exist, and I don’t think it’s worth watching things deteriorate to find out.
Wildfires can destroy large swaths of land, and they are certain to occur every year, but not at every susceptible house. My mother has lived in a house in a high fire risk area of Northern California since the early 1980s, but her particular neighborhood hasn't burnt. Neither has the houses of my father-in-law, grandma-in-law, and two brothers, which are all in similarly high risk areas of Nor-Cal. Likewise, in March, nobody would have predicted that Paradise, CA would all but be destroyed, nor would they have predicted the damage in Santa Rosa the previous March. But we could still have concluded that those areas are at risk.
An insurance company can assign a value to your property (in fact, they probably already have), can estimate the probability of loss due to forrest fire, compute the expected value of payouts, add overhead, add profit, and sell you a policy. Damages are correlated on a local level, but not on a statewide level - that there was a fire in Paradise, CA doesn't increase the odds that Quincy or Fort Bragg will experience a fire too this year.
With fire damages in the tens billions per year but maybe only millions of insured to spread around the cost, people might not like the resulting premiums, but they can choose to lower their risks (and hence insurance premiums) or roll the dice.
[1]: And in managing the large pile of money you need to have on hand in case you end up with more unlucky customers than expected.
That's why for catastrophe risks like wildfires you have reinsurers talking that risk - e.g. catastrophe reinsurance market in Bermuda.
Of course some customers might not like having to pay market rates for fire insurance.
That's a chick-little, strawman and blame-the-victim argument. The issues are:
1. PGE likely started the fire. They should be held responsible for this specific incident, not passing the buck to ratepayers or anyone else.
2. PGE is corrupting and coopting liability when it needs to pay the penalties for its actions, not pass the buck. This is separate from 1. because it indicates a greater decay of liability and they're insulating themselves to gradually become an untouchable mafia.
3. In order to get 2., removing SIG, PAC and large private monies, and all those who benefit from them, from politics is imperative.
4. Paradise is a tiny town that doesn't do a very good job with code enforcement. My mom had to mobilize the neighbors to get an abandoned propery's owner to mow their 7 ft tall, dried weeds and remove fire other hazards like an abandoned house with a tree crashed through it, but then the institutionalized owner later allowed a random tree-trimmer to dump dozens of piles of pine sawdust and logs on that property. SMH.
5. "Regulations" aren't an uniform obelisk to scapegoat that you implied. One regulation maybe advantageous or harmful uniquely to each and every affected group, depending. So don't even start spreading the tired, libertarian, utopian refrains like "If only there were no regulations, markets solve everything," which is utter horseshit. Regulations can and do work but only if the governed demand it and refuse to allow the rich and their corporations to have their way.
It's the POLR for most former/current homeowners to move to where professional town managers exist rather than deal with small-town incompetence like the bumblers in Paradise or Butte's Sheriff Kory's flimsy excuse for not activating the EAS, which likely caused the needless deaths of hundreds of disabled and elderly people.
_But_, doesn't the liability also, in part, apply to the state and/or the federal government? How far did the fire unnecessarily spread? Was the land in the area being properly maintained, with good fire breaks, routine controlled burns etc, or are they skimping like they have been all over the country?
What are the positives ... chasing and potentially realizing your creative (music/film) or tech dreams there? That can be done in other cities like Nashville or possibly close to here in a few years with Amazon building in Crystal City, VA (other big tech companies may follow). Well love to hear the positives of living in California!
This is just sample bias. California is the size of NY all the way down to Florida.
If something bad happens on the west coast it has a 60% chance of being in CA but if it happens on the east coast it could be in VA, MD, DC, FL, GA, SC, NC, WV, DE
The media and Hollywood create a pretty weird perception of California, the climate, geography and economy is very varied.
Of course there's plenty I miss, but just depending on what you value the DMV is not that much better than California.
Instead, I wish them the best of luck repairing their homes and send my condolences (occasionally monetary aid).
Maybe you've always grown up in nicer areas than I have and don't realize how bad it can be. Sure, rent in Michigan is cheap, near Detroit - which is appealing all the way up till there's police tape in your backyard from a shooting. You pay less taxes and you feel it every morning when you drive to work, because the roads are less maintained than the flavor of the week JavaScript frameworks from 2012, which BY THE WAY you almost certainly will need to drive to work in Michigan, since the jobs tend to be far away and public transport would be great if it were supposed to be the punchline to a joke. The restaurant scene in NorCal is not the best in the world or country, but unless you want Mediterranean food it's nearly unilaterally better than anywhere I've been in Michigan. Michigan does not have the harshest winters by far, but I'd almost rather choke to death in smoke than deal with another Michigan winter, sliding around on the ice trying not to crash my car while freezing my ass off. Speaking of which, How about Michigan car insurance? It's pretty hard to put into words how godawful the car insurance situation is, but I paid more than double for worse insurance in Michigan and that's reason enough to hate it.
Wildfires are terrible. Homelessness is bad. But the rent prices, well, they're high for a reason; it's a great place to live despite all of the setbacks. And maybe there's a better set of trade-offs elsewhere in the U.S., but I get the opportunity to work with some of the best engineers I've ever met and that's pretty hard to find anywhere else.
So yes. It is a bummer when the rent comes out of my paycheck each month, it is upsetting when I hear the death tolls and see the wildfire smoke. But, I also remember where I came from and frankly I'm choosing to stay for now.
I've only been there for vacations, competing on a reality tv show and an unpleasant meeting with Google re: buying one of my apps.
If you list all the disasters in a big area, your list gets big fast, but no individual place actually has all those things, unless perhaps if Moses shows up to intimidate a Pharaoh.
Other general liability insurance is now priced for damages that cannot be assigned or recovered. But "no fault fire insurance" would shift cost from the government-backed-utility-rate-pool to private insurers.
It's hard to imagine that such a shift would be more efficient, in part because PG&E is in the best position to assess its own risk -- and buy its own insurance and reinsurance.
Surely, somewhere in the utility, someone bought a SwissRe or Loyds policy against freak catastrophic loss.
If the intervention you want to incentivise is replacing wooden roofs and removing fuel near the house, raising insurance bills for people who don't do that could be one way of doing it.
Of course, there's also a case for incentivising not starting the fire in the first place.
[1] https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/built-to-burn/
I saw a picture of Paradise after it burned. It was remarkable, the houses were completely gone but the trees were still standing all around. There's something wrong with how we build and maintain our structures in fire prone areas.
Wildfires are already covered by property re/insurance. The problem is that risk is badly priced, as modeling for wildfires is currently very underdeveloped compared to hurricanes or earthquakes. There has been no wildfire event of a similar magnitude of property losses in recent history.
Shameless plug: At tensorflight we are actually starting some prototyping of wildfire risk models for the insurance industry based on satellite imagery.
As far as who is at fault: a fire needs a fuel, oxygen and a spark. It can be argued that a spark is going to happen somewhere, and mitigating it is more about not having the fuel so that it can chain and spread.
In another case construction crews finding were found liable for a nearby mink farm's lost of income when the sounds freaked out the animals and they ruined their coats, because blowing stuff up, even done legally, is considered a high liability task.
At least those are my recollections of the decisions, it has been a while and I didn't study them myself.
With the mink case, the issue wasn't that blowing stuff up is a high-liability task. The issue was that it was a nuisance. Nuisance activities can be legal, and even first-in-time (like say, cow farms predating housing developments). Very nutshell version, but basically the issue with nuisance law is that the activity's effects transcend the boundaries of one's property and so the doer can be held liable for those effects.
In Australia a big part of a Firey's job is running controlled burns in the (relatively) low fire risk season to keep the amount of flammable material around cities and property to a minimum.
It is a continuation, in a way, of a much more ancient indiginous practice of regularly burning large swathes of bush. It is very much a part of the natural ecosystem here.
The flora is quite different, too — a coastal live oak takes way longer to grow back than a eucalyptus (and is also less ridiculously flammable when established). So burning huge swaths here would generally not be a great thing.
https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/california-will-se...
https://www.kqed.org/science/1927354/controlled-burns-can-he...
Basically all of the northern areas in the Northern Territory are burnt once every two years or so.
One thing to consider is that Indigenous Australians have been doing regular burns for tens of thousands of years. It's pretty well understood how the land burns, how often it needs to be burnt and what good/safe conditions look like.
And they’ve been happening more and more anyway.
Wildfire is a natural part of the ecosystem in CA as well. Forests need it to stay healthy and clear the underbrush. But humans decided fire is bad because we like to live in fire areas.
Yes, prescribed burns are common in the off season for all fire districts. However, CalFire has some unique challenges [1] that most of the other states do not have to deal with when it comes to air quality and sufficient water conditions during their shrinking off season. https://www.kqed.org/science/1927354/controlled-burns-can-he...
[1] https://www.nifc.gov/nicc/sitreprt.pdf (page 6) [2] https://www.nifc.gov/nicc/
Because controlled burns experienced increasing friction, policy evolved to a "let-burn" policy for naturally-started fires (brush gets cleared without anyone having to take responsibility). Problem is, if an area is unnaturally overgrown, fire can have disproportionate severity and become impossible to constrain.
Democrats value people over corporations!
Keep resisting.
AFAICT, the post contains hyperbole, but its main thesis seems worth discussing. Even if it's just to conclusively refute it.
In case it's helpful: people sometimes think that we enforce this standard because we're uncomfortable with intensity and only want (say) a nice and civil bourgeois discussion. And they make legitimate objections to constraining discussion for this reason. But it isn't our reason at all. Rather, it's because of the systemic effects such comments have on a large public forum like HN. Experience teaches that they lead rapidly to lower-quality threads, in which people drop thoughtfulness, start to yell, and eventually just try to blast and hurt each other. Since the whole point of HN is to try to sustain a higher quality level on the internet, we have to moderate such comments rigorously.
So when we moderate HN, we're not thinking so much of the specific comment we're replying to, but what that type of comment leads to. I don't usually explain this because, as you can see from this post here, it takes too long.
Wouldn't the solution for this type of problem be to write it down only once and thoroughly in a blog post, and then refer to it? Or a number of posts, and you only post the pointer.
I've had that idea in general for public forums, that there should be one thoroughly explained list of aspects and view points, and when there is a problem with a post you simply moderate it with "That is a #42".
I do sometimes link to previous HN comments, but only ad hoc. And I have to remember things in order to link to them, which prevents it from getting totally static.
Because we know how to effectively employ "scapegoating" to hide our own misdeeds.
Look at aerial views above the Oakland Hills before and after the 1991 fire. Roads choked with illegally parked cars, badly overgrown brush, etc. Almost 3,300 home's destroyed.
Look at the same streets now on a typical Fall day: the exact same risk factors in similar proportions. A similar fire now would kill twice as many.
It doesn't even take effect (legally) until 2019.
I feel like your statement is misleading. Regulators have come out and said they don't want PG&E to go bankrupt. PG&E and the regulators are probably both supportive of extending the existing legislation to cover 2018.
However I am not aware of PG&E or regulators having acted illegally. Publicly stating an opinion before taking action is not illegal.
Plus the bailouts are generally being used to fund PG&E's rebuild on fires where they weren't at fault (from a common sense perspective) but were found liable under California law (see my earlier statement).
People are angry and want someone to blame even tho this was a natural disaster. With current laws, PG&E is being painted as the bad guy and are stuck between a rock and a hard place.
https://freebeacon.com/issues/california-gov-browns-veto-wil...