Utility Says Its Equipment May Have Started Record Texas Fire

The Latest Photos Climate Change’s Role Ranchers Face Crippling Losses Wildfires in U.S. History U.S. World Business Arts Lifestyle Opinion Audio Games Cooking Wirecutter The Athletic The Latest Photos Climate Change’s Role Ranchers Face Crippling Losses Wildfires in U.S. History The company, Xcel Energy, said that its facilities in the Texas Panhandle “appear to have […]

Utility Says Its Equipment May Have Started Record Texas Fire

Utility Says Its Equipment May Have Started Record Texas Fire thumbnail

The company, Xcel Energy, said that its facilities in the Texas Panhandle “appear to have been involved in an ignition” of the fire, which has burned more than 1 million acres.

The rubble of a burned house stands out against a smoky sky.
A house destroyed by the Smokehouse Creek fire in Canadian, Texas.Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

A utility company acknowledged on Thursday that its equipment appeared to have started the largest wildfire in Texas’ recorded history, a blaze that began last week and went on to burn more than 1 million acres in the state’s Panhandle region.

Xcel Energy, an electric and gas company that operates in a mostly rural part of Texas as well as seven other states, said in a statement that its “facilities appear to have been involved in an ignition” of the blaze, the Smokehouse Creek fire, which has led to two deaths and killed thousands of cattle and other livestock.

The Smokehouse Creek fire is by far the largest of several fires that have charred the Panhandle since last week, leveling homes in and around small towns and spelling potential economic ruin for farmers and ranchers whose land was scorched.

Though the company acknowledged that its infrastructure may have started the fire, Xcel Energy said it did not agree with claims that the company was negligent in operating its equipment.

Some landowners have accused the company of being responsible for the fire, saying that an electric pole near Stinnett, Texas, was blown over by strong winds and could have set fire to dry brush and grass in the area.