The U.S. utilities sector could suffer annual losses of up to $4.1 billion as climate hazards threaten to batter the industry’s infrastructure, according to a new report.
Roughly one in five global power lines are heavily exposed to rising sea levels, hurricanes, wildfires and storms, according to
Rating agencies have downgraded at least nine energy companies due to physical climate risks over the past three years. One firm, PG&E Corp., was forced into bankruptcy because of escalating wildfire risks. California investigators said this week that a power line owned by the company started the
Climate hazards have been responsible for more than $2 trillion in global economic losses over the past two decades, with the energy sector bearing the brunt, according to BNEF. The largest storms have caused more than $20 billion in damage to the U.S. grid over the past five years and adaptation could cost a few million dollars per mile.
“Hurricanes have caused billions of dollars in damage to the U.S. power grid in the past decade,” said Kathy Gao, a technology analyst at BNEF who wrote the report. “Building a more decentralized grid, such as micro-grids and behind-the-meter resources, could increase resiliency.”
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Damian Shepherd in London at