7-Day Public Safety Power Shutoff Forecast
6/6: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/7: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/8: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/9: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/10: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/11: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
6/12: No Public Safety Power Shutoff
PG&E Weather Team Comments
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The information in this map is intended only to provide customers with a general estimate regarding potential locations that may be impacted by a PSPS event should one become necessary. Conditions affecting a possible PSPS event can change quickly and the actual impact of a future PSPS event is uncertain.
Friday, June 6, 2025
NOTE: This forecast is based on weather conditions and fuel moisture content only. It does not include other criteria used to determine whether a PSPS may be necessary. This forecast only provides a broad overview for a potential PSPS event in the next 7 days. It is determined from an analysis of forecast weather, the potential for wind-related damage, and fuel moisture content in dead and live vegetation. It is not a fire danger forecast. The forecast is broken down by county. PSPS decisions are made at more granular levels. Only a portion of a county may experience a PSPS event. While a PSPS event may not be expected for an area, due to the interconnectivity of the grid any location within PG&E territory may be subject to PSPS event.
No Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) events are planned for the next week. Along the coast, areas of low clouds are expected to clear by late morning, followed by sunny skies and times of breezy onshore winds. Across the interior, warm and dry weather continues today, with a warm-up expected over the weekend. Coastal areas remain near or slightly below normal temperatures. Daily chances for afternoon and evening thunderstorms over high Sierra through early next week, with chances extending into northern mountains late weekend. Cooler and more seasonable temperatures are expected across the territory from mid- to late next week.
Fuels: The annual grass crop is mostly cured below 2-3000 feet but there are still pockets transitioning from live to dead close to the coast. Live fuel moisture is on the decline across the lower elevations after reaching maximum annual values earlier this month. However, moisture content is beginning to increase in the higher elevations where the growing season is later. Dead fuel moisture values will fluctuate over the next week and are generally trending drier but are not quite near critical levels at this time. The latest 4 Month Seasonal Outlook from Northern Operations Predictive Services is forecasting normal fire activity for near Coastal Areas while trending above normal for inland areas thru August then above normal areawide in September. Southern Operations Predictive Services is forecasting above normal fire activity for the South Coast area June through September.
There are 525 of 788 circuits in High Fire Risk Areas (HFRA) that are EPSS-enabled today. The remaining 263 circuits in HFRA will have devices postured in normal settings due to low FPI rating. Additionally, 7 EPSS Buffer-only circuits are enabled today.
PLEASE NOTE: This forecast is published daily by an operational meteorologist from PG&E's Meteorology and Analytics team. This forecast has been customized for PG&E utility operations. It should not be used for any other purpose or by any other entity.