Last week, utility company Pacific Gas and Electric shut off power to tens of thousands of Northern California residents and businesses citing wildfire concerns. Included in the blackout were a number of Napa and Sonoma County wineries in the middle of harvestโ€”many of whom struggled to secure temporary generators to continue production.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, wineries in the North Bay that were able to rent last-minute generators were required to pay construction fees for their installation, in addition to roughly $1,500 per day to power crushing equipment and to keep fermentation tanks at set temperatures.

For most, time was a concern. PG&E only made the blackout plans public on Monday, Oct. 7. By Tuesday morning, the companyโ€™s website had crashed and many Californians had no way to determine if or when their power would be affected. In addition to wineries, a number of nursing homes, private residences, and public roads went dark without warning.

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As reported by The New York Times, PG&E is currently facing $30 billion in liabilities.

In 2018 a PG&E transmission line was blamed for the Camp Fire, Californiaโ€™s most destructive wildfire which killed more than 80 people in the town of Paradise; in 2015 two people were killed in the Butte Fire when a PG&E power line came into contact with a pine tree; and in 2010 a PG&E pipeline exploded in the city of San Bruno, killing eight people. In addition, roughly 40 smaller wildfires have allegedly been started by PG&E equipment since 2017.

A number of these fires, including both the Butte and Camp Fires, have subsequently affected wine production in the Bay Area with their ash and smoke.

According to SF Gate, PG&E has added a new round of power outages yesterday, Wednesday, October 23rd and today, October 25th for 179,000 northern California residents.

Laura Jaye Cramer is a freelance writer based in California and has written forย SF Weekly,ย GOOD, andย PAPER Magazine. Read more Laura Jaye Cramer for Sprudge Wine.