This is a dumb story. All of the campuses are generally east of 101 in industrially zoned land, which is subject to a wholly different kind of risk from sea level rise to liquefaction in an earthquake.
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There are way more interesting tech angles such as — when does micro gridding become viable at scale and how did PG&E lobby to make it more complicated/expensive/impossible to leave the grid?
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Or if we nationalize PG&E and make it a public utility, what happens to wildfire liability and inverse condemnation and does that break insurance markets throughout the state?
End of conversation
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