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Check the appropriate box:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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CONFIDENTIAL, FOR USE OF THE COMMISSION ONLY (AS PERMITTED BY RULE 14a-6(e)(2))
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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Definitive Additional Materials
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Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
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Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
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No fee required.
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
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Joint Notice of
2025
Annual Meetings
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Joint Proxy Statement
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Joint notice of 2025 annual meetings of shareholders of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
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Executive summary
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Proposal 1:
Election of directors of PG&E Corporation and
Pacific Gas and Electric Company
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Director biographies | |||||
Governance | |||||
Operations
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Oversight | |||||
Related Person Transactions | |||||
Compensation of non-employee directors
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Share ownership information | |||||
Proposal 2:
Advisory vote to approve executive compensation for
PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
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Compensation Discussion and Analysis
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Compensation Committee Report
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Executive officer compensation
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Proposal 3:
Ratification of the appointment of Deloitte and Touche LLP as the independent public accounting firm for PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
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Report of the Audit Committees
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Proposal 4:
Approval of the 2025 PG&E Corporation Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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User guide
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Defined terms | |||||
Website availability of governance documents | |||||
General information about the 2025 annual meetings and voting | |||||
2026 Annual meeting | |||||
Appendix A:
PG&E Corporation 2025 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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PG&E Corporation
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Pacific Gas and Electric Company
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April 10, 2025
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Dear Shareholders,
Today at PG&E
1
, we continue to make progress on our Triple Bottom Line approach of serving People, the Planet, and California’s Prosperity.
In service of People, we are proud of the foundation of safety that our coworkers are building for the hometowns we serve. In 2024, we achieved a second consecutive year of zero major wildfires caused by company equipment. Our layers of wildfire protection are working. We have buried 875 miles of powerlines in the highest fire-risk areas, installed over 630 AI-enabled wildfire cameras, added more than 1,500 sectionalizing devices to narrow the impact of wildfire safety outages, and much more.
Our foundation of safety is also evident in our natural gas operations, where we continued our top-quartile industry performance on reducing pipeline dig-ins from third parties and responding to gas emergencies in under 20 minutes.
Of course, our work on safety is never finished, particularly as we see more extreme weather and other impacts from a changing climate. To meet these challenges, we’re focused on building infrastructure for purpose: an energy system that not only is resilient to changing conditions, but also enables a clean energy future that’s better for the Planet.
In 2024, we continued our strong track record on clean energy—98% of the electricity we delivered to customers who purchase their power directly from us was greenhouse-gas free. On our natural gas system, we interconnected four new renewable natural gas (RNG) facilities last year, enabling more California-produced RNG to reach consumers and reducing methane emissions. We are also pleased to continue operations of our Diablo Canyon Power Plant, a reliable generator of clean power for the state.
In addition to our progress in serving People and Planet, we are determined to serve California’s Prosperity with energy that’s affordable for all. Our plan to achieve this is called our Simple, Affordable Model.
The model starts with our expected capital investments of approximately $63 billion from 2024 through 2028 to continue improving safety and reliability for customers. To reduce the impact of that infrastructure investment on customer bills, we have a three-tiered approach.
We have set a goal to reduce non-fuel operating and maintenance costs by at least 2% each year. In 2023 and 2024, we surpassed this goal. By reducing materials, labor and other costs as well as more efficiently planning and automating our work, we saved more than $1 billion in operating and capital costs in 2024. We then reinvested that savings into the business to continue improvements at no added cost to customers.
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We also see opportunity for advancing affordability through new demand for electricity. In fact, we expect demand to double by 2040, driven by new data centers, fully electric vehicle charging and fully electric homes and businesses. More load growth can reduce the price per kilowatt-hour for all by spreading out the fixed costs of grid operations. As a sign of growing demand, we added nearly 14,000 new customers to our grid in 2024—a modern company record.
Finally, we see opportunity to improve affordability by lowering our financing costs. We plan to achieve this as our credit ratings continue to improve and as we secure alternative financing including federal loans.
In the end, our Simple, Affordable Model calls for limiting annual growth in customer costs to 2-4%. As proof that it’s possible, we are pleased that average electric bills on March 1, 2025, were lower than they were a year ago. Similarly, natural gas delivery rates are expected to remain flat in 2025.
We are proud of our progress in recent years, and we know more is needed. All of us at PG&E are steadfast in our commitment to serving People, the Planet and California’s Prosperity by providing energy that’s resilient, clean, and affordable for all.
Sincerely,
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Kerry W. Cooper
Chair of the Board
PG&E Corporation
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Patricia K. Poppe
Chief Executive Officer
PG&E Corporation
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Proposal to be Voted On
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Corporation | Utility | Recommendation | |||||||||||||||||
1.
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Election of Directors (nominated by the Boards) | |||||||||||||||||||
Rajat Bahri
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•
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• | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Cheryl F. Campbell |
•
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• | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Edward G. Cannizzaro |
•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Kerry W. Cooper |
•
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• | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Leo P. Denault
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•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Jessica L. Denecour
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•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Mark E. Ferguson III |
•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
W. Craig Fugate |
•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Arno L. Harris | • | • | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Carlos M. Hernandez | • | • | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
John O. Larsen
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• | • | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe
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•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | • | FOR | ||||||||||||||||||
William L. Smith
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•
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•
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FOR | |||||||||||||||||
Benjamin F. Wilson | • | • | FOR | |||||||||||||||||
2.
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Advisory Vote to Approve Executive Compensation
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• | • | FOR | ||||||||||||||||
3.
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Ratification of the Appointment of Deloitte and Touche LLP as the Independent Public Accounting Firm
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• | • | FOR | ||||||||||||||||
4.
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Approval of the 2025 PG&E Corporation Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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• | FOR |
Meeting information
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Voting your shares
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IMPORTANT NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY OF 2025 PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL MEETINGS:
We are making the Joint Proxy Statement and form of proxy available to shareholders starting on or about April 10, 2025. The Joint Proxy Statement and 2024 Annual Report are available at
investor.pgecorp.com/financials/annual-reports-and-proxy-statements
. Detailed information on how to vote your proxy is included in the “User Guide” at the end of this Joint Proxy Statement.
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Brian M. Wong
Corporate Secretary
PG&E Corporation
Pacific Gas and Electric Company
April 10, 2025
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Date:
May 22, 2025
Time:
10:00 a.m. Pacific Time
Location:
Virtual Meeting
1
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Your vote is extremely important
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The deadline to vote is:
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Record Date
Shareholders as of March 24, 2025, are entitled to vote at the Annual Meetings.
Solicitation of Proxies
The Boards of Directors are soliciting proxies from you for use at the Annual Meetings or any adjournments or postponements. Proxies allow designated individuals to vote on your behalf.
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11:59 p.m. Eastern Time
on May 21, 2025
— or —
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time
on May 19, 2025
if you are a participant in
PG&E’s 401(k) Plan.
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Internet
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Phone
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Proxy Card by Mail
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2025 Annual Meeting
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Proposal 1:
Election of Directors
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Elect each of the nominees listed in this Joint Proxy Statement to serve on the Boards of Directors until the 2026 Annual Meetings of Shareholders.
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Our Boards are:
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Each Board’s Recommendation:
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• Led by an Independent Chair.
• Qualified: Top skills include safety, utility operations, wildfire prevention, financial analysis, cybersecurity, and renewable energy.
• Committed to serving the long-term interests of shareholders.
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FOR
each nominee
Nominee biographies are on page 16, and demographic and skills information on page 25.
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Proposal 2:
Advisory Vote to Approve Executive Compensation (Say on Pay)
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Approve an advisory vote on the compensation of PG&E’s named executive officers.
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PG&E’s executive compensation plans:
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Each Board’s Recommendation:
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• Pay for performance
• Align with shareholders
• Provide market competitive pay
• Comply with legal requirements
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FOR
the advisory approval
PG&E’s compensation plans are described in detail on page 48.
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Proposal 3:
Appointment of the Independent Auditor
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Ratify the appointment of Deloitte and Touche LLP (D&T) as PG&E’s independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2025.
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Deloitte and Touche LLP
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Each Board’s Recommendation:
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• D&T is an internationally recognized firm, with deep knowledge of our industry, and specific understanding of the California regulatory structure.
• The team within D&T rotates periodically to provide a fresh look at our controls.
• The Audit Committees oversee the selection of D&T after a careful review.
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FOR
ratifying the appointment of
Deloitte and Touche LLP
Additional information on D&T can be found on page 100.
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Proposal 4:
Approval of the PG&E Corporation 2025 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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|||||
Approve the PG&E Corporation 2025 Employee Stock Purchase Plan Effective January 1, 2026
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Employee Stock Purchase Plan
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PG&E Corporation Board Recommendation
|
||||
• Provides the opportunity to employees of the Corporation and the Utility to become Corporation shareholders by purchasing shares of PG&E Corporation’s common stock using payroll deductions over quarterly periods.
• Aligns with shareholders.
• Facilitates hiring and retention of employees of the Corporation and the Utility.
|
FOR
approval of the PG&E Corporation 2025 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
Additional information on the Employee Stock Purchase Plan can be found on page 104.
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70,000
Square Miles
Service area
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16
Million
Customers served
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People | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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28,000
Approximate number of employees
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23%
Coworkers are members of ERGs
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5
GENERATIONS
at work
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Planet | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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98%
Greenhouse gas-free electricity provided to retail customers
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675,000+
Total number of electric vehicles operating in our service area
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880,000+
Total number of interconnected private solar customers
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Prosperity | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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875
MILES
undergrounded since 2021
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4.09
BILLION DOLLARS
Spent with diverse suppliers
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43,000+
HOURS
of employee volunteer time
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Visual Management
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Operating Reviews
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Problem Solving
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Standardization
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Waste Elimination
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Belonging Pillars
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PG&E has a workforce that reflects the hometowns we serve.
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PG&E removes barriers to level the playing field for all coworkers.
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All coworkers and their ideas matter at PG&E.
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Coworkers are known, valued, respected, supported, and connected.
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Elements of Joy
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I feel known working at PG&E.
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I am proud to work for PG&E.
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I feel loved working at PG&E.
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I enjoy working for PG&E.
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Approximately 17,000 of our nearly 28,000 coworkers are covered by a collective bargaining agreement.
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44 percent of our employees have a tenure of more than 10 years.
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Our workforce reflects the hometowns we serve
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Our coworkers represent five generations, most of whom are Millennials, Gen X, and Boomers
1
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(1)
Generational data refers to “Millennials” for individuals born between 1981-1996, “Gen X” between 1965-1980, and “Boomers” between 1946-1964.
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1.3M
HOURS
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39 | ||||||||||||
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Technical, leadership, and coworker training provided by PG&E
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Increase in training (7%), including instructor-led (7%) and Academy-delivered hands-on training (11%) between 2024 and 2025
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Apprenticeship job classifications trained through apprenticeship programs that reduce barriers to entry for prospective employees
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We create opportunity with PG&E PowerPathway™, an innovative workforce development program designed to help prepare a talent pool of local qualified candidates for high demand careers in the utility and energy industry by providing 4-12 weeks of classroom and hands-on training. In 2024, PowerPathway held six signature programs resulting in 121 graduates being prepared to enter careers in traffic control, vegetation management and other trade-based opportunities. More than 1,300 Californians have completed the program since inception in 2008.
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Our Progress
|
||||||||
As the state’s largest energy provider, we embrace our foundational role in transitioning California to a decarbonized and more climate-resilient economy. Today, one in every six solar rooftops in the country is in PG&E’s service area, and about one in eight electric vehicles in the nation plugs into PG&E’s grid. We are also partnering with a broad spectrum of stakeholders to create a pathway to a more equitable and affordable energy future.
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Generated enough greenhouse-gas free electricity to meet 98
%
of our retail customer electricity consumption
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Brought the total number of interconnected private solar customers to more than
880,000
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Managed contracts for more than
4.6 GW
of battery energy storage to be deployed over the next several years and operated 183 MW of Utility-owned battery storage
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||||||||||||
Helped enable the total number of
electric vehicles
operating in our service area to exceed
675,000
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Brought the total number of customers who have installed
battery storage
at their homes or businesses to more than
120,000
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Helped customers avoid emissions and energy costs through
robust energy efficiency programs
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3.25 million customers
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835,000+ MT of CO
2
avoided
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$46.8 million
lent
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$1,602
saved
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Home Energy Reports reached
3.25 million customers
. We are a
utility leader in the US for number of customers served and the program resulted in over
$128 million in bill savings
for customers in 2024.
|
Helped customers avoid more than
835,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions
through our energy efficiency programs.
|
Energy efficiency
financing program funded
336 loans
for a total of
$46.8 million
lent
.
|
Energy Savings Assistance (Main) program treated over 50,000
households
with an
average lifetime bill savings of approximately $1,602.
|
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1.37M
|
![]() |
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|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CARE discount customers
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3.9M
page views
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$4.09B
diverse spending
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$3.2M in
grants
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Helped
296,000 customers
enroll in the California Alternate Rates for Energy program, providing income-qualified customers with a monthly discount on their Utility bill, for a
total of 1.37 million
PG&E customers
enrolled in the program. These customers received discounts totaling approximately $1.1 billion.
|
Marketed an integrated marketplace website, called the Energy Action Guide, which guides residential customers to find the energy programs, resources, and customer energy products that suit their needs.
The website saw over 695,000 unique visitors and over 3.1 million page views.
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Our Supply Chain Responsibility program includes
technical assistance to help all businesses
learn best practices like how to measure and reduce greenhouse gas emissions and how to navigate the Request for Proposal process.
|
Awarded
$3.2 million in multiple grants to local FireSafe Councils
to reduce the increased threat of wildfires in northern and central California.
|
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COMMUNITY SUPPORT
We support our hometowns through charitable giving programs and coworker donations and matching gift donations. Our coworkers also volunteered more than 43,000+ hours in their communities while supporting 286 PG&E-sponsored volunteer events throughout our service territory.
|
||||||||||
The PG&E Corporation Foundation | |||||||||||
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|||||||||||
More than
$7.8 million
in total contributions from PG&E coworkers, retirees, and matching gifts from The PG&E Corporation Foundation to over 4,800 non-profit organizations and schools.
|
|||||||||||
PG&E and Foundation | |||||||||||
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|||||||||||
$36.3 million
in charitable giving from PG&E and The PG&E Corporation Foundation to non-profit organizations and schools.
|
Wildfire safety
|
||||||||
PG&E has taken a stand that catastrophic wildfires shall stop. In 2024, we met or exceeded all 47 of our Wildfire Mitigation Plan (WMP) commitments as we continued to focus on improvements in system hardening, vegetation management, system inspections and monitoring, and modeling capabilities.
1
|
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||||||||||||
Sectionalized devices installed:
1,541
since 2019
|
System hardening:
1,996
line miles hardened since 2019
|
Over
223,000
poles inspected in High Fire Threat Districts and High Fire Risk Areas in 2024
|
(1)
We met four commitments with external factors, which represent reasonable circumstances that may impact execution such as landholder refusals and environmental delays.
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(1)
Based on an evaluation of the effectiveness of EPSS under conditions of elevated likelihood of destructive fire outcomes (R3 Fire Potential Index rating).
(2)
The HFRA informs the geographic scope of PSPS events by identifying areas in PG&E service territory where existing or future overhead electrical infrastructure could be the source of an ignition that, during a hazardous offshore wind event, results in a catastrophic fire. HFTD Tier 2 consists of areas on the CPUC’s Fire-Threat Map where there is an elevated risk for destructive utility-associated wildfires. HFTD Tier 3 consists of areas where there is an extreme risk for destructive utility-associated wildfires.
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Climate resilience
|
||||||||
The impacts of climate change on our infrastructure are already a reality. Peak electric loads are expected to increase with rising temperatures due to direct impacts of ambient temperatures on equipment and direct impacts on electricity demand driven by rising air conditioning installation and usage.
Climate change will continue to intensify the potential for wildfires throughout California. Additionally, our assets on the coast and in or near watersheds face potential increased exposures to coastal, riverine, and precipitation-related flooding because of climate-driven changes in precipitation and sea-level rise.
In 2024, we completed our first system-wide Climate Adaptation Vulnerability Assessment which identifies potential climate change vulnerabilities of our assets and operations to projected future environmental conditions. The assessment supports PG&E in prioritizing adaptive actions needed to build a climate-resilient energy system Community needs and preferences, especially for our most socially vulnerable customers, were identified in the assessment and will be considered as we make decisions about how to adapt the energy system to climate change.
|
||||||||
Financial performance
|
||||||||
PG&E’s physical layers of protection—including wildfire mitigation programs (e.g., system hardening and undergrounding), EPSS, PSPS, and situational awareness—are combining to make our system safer and more resilient in the face of evolving climate challenges. Additionally, management is focused squarely on earning the trust of our customers and owners by delivering customer bill affordability alongside consistent superior financial performance. PG&E’s plan is designed to sustain the high levels of capital investment required to deliver the service our hometowns deserve, and key elements of our strategy include sustainable operating cost savings, improved balance sheet health and pursuit of efficient financing opportunities.
|
||||||||
Board Recommendation |
What are you voting on?
PG&E Corporation and the Utility each asks its respective shareholders to approve the 2025 director nominations. PG&E Corporation and Utility directors are elected to hold office until the 2026 Joint Annual Meeting, or until their successors are elected and qualified, except in the case of death, resignation or removal of a director. If any of the nominees is unable at the time of the Joint Annual Meeting to accept nomination or serve as a director, the proxy holders named on the PG&E Corporation or Utility Proxy Card (as applicable) will vote for substitute nominees at their discretion.
|
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Vote “FOR” Each Nominee
|
||||||||||
Director Nominee tenure ranges
|
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Independence | Representation | ||||||||||
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Board nominees at Corporation are independent under NYSE definitions
|
Board nominees at Utility are independent under NYSE definitions
|
Board nominees at Corporation are either women or racially and ethnically diverse
|
Board nominees at Utility are either women or racially and ethnically diverse
|
![]()
Rajat Bahri
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 60 |
•
Audit
•
Finance and Innovation
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Chief Financial Officer, Icertis
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Financial Performance and Planning
Technology and Cybersecurity
Risk Management
|
Background
•
Chief Financial Officer, Icertis (Contract lifecycle management software company) (2022 to present)
•
Chief Financial Officer, ID.me, Inc. (Digital identity network) (2021 to 2022)
•
Chief Financial Officer, Wish (Digital marketplace) (2016 to 2021)
•
Chief Financial Officer, Jasper Technologies Inc. (Internet of Things service platform) (2013 to 2016)
•
Chief Financial Officer, Trimble Navigation Limited (Information technology) (2005 to 2013)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Bahri is a seasoned Chief Financial Officer with public company experience and extensive knowledge of finance, financial performance, and planning and audit. He is skilled at building enterprise-wide systems and teams, and brings decades of experience in executive compensation, enterprise risk management, and corporate governance, as well as the operation of audit committees. As a California resident, Mr. Bahri also provides the perspective of a utility customer to the Board.
Past Public Company Board Service
•
STEC, Inc. (2008 to 2011) (Chair of the Audit Committee)
|
||||||||||||||||
![]()
Cheryl F. Campbell
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
April 2019 | 65 |
•
Executive (Chair, Pacific Gas and Electric Company)
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight (Chair)
•
Sustainability and Governance
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Retired Senior Vice President of Gas, Xcel Energy, Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Natural Gas Transmission, Distribution, and Safety
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Community Leadership
|
Background
•
Energy Industry Consultant (2019 to 2021)
•
Senior Vice President, Gas (2015 to 2018); President and Chief Executive Officer, West Gas Interstate Company (2012 to 2018), Xcel Energy, Inc. (Electric and natural gas utility)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Ms. Campbell has 35 years of energy experience in midstream, interstate pipelines, and utilities. At Xcel Energy, she developed industry leading gas integrity and risk management programs, and improved operating, environmental, and safety metrics. Ms. Campbell championed public safety at the national level, serving on the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Gas Pipeline Advisory Committee to provide guidance on pipeline safety regulations. She is also involved in local and industry groups that work to advance leadership development and STEM education.
Public Company Board Service
•
TC Energy Corporation (2022 to present)
Other Board Service
•
National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD), Colorado Chapter (2022 to present)
•
JANA Corporation (2020 to present)
•
Summit Utilities, Inc. (2020 to present) (Chair of the Board)
Past Board Service
•
Women’s Leadership Foundation (2020 to 2023) (Chair of the Board)
•
Gold Shovel Association (2020 to 2022)
•
National Underground Group (2018 to 2023)
|
![]()
Edward G. Cannizzaro
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
February 2023 | 64 |
•
Finance and Innovation
•
Audit
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Former Global Head of Quality, Risk and Regulatory, KPMG International
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Financial Performance and Planning
Risk Management
Audit
|
Background
•
Global Head of Quality, Risk and Regulatory, KPMG International (2018 to 2022); National Managing Partner - Risk Management (2016 to 2018); Global Lead Engagement Partner (2009 to 2016), Western Area Managing Partner (2007 to 2009), KPMG (Professional services firm)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Cannizzaro brings decades of experience as a global financial executive to the Boards of the Corporation and the Utility. Over the course of his 40-year career at KPMG, he held various leadership positions in audit, risk management, and operational regulatory compliance where he advised clients in a wide range of industries, including e-commerce and financial technology. Most recently, Mr. Cannizzaro served as the Global Head of Quality, Risk and Regulatory with KPMG International where he was responsible for the design and implementation of quality controls and ethics and compliance monitoring programs across 145 countries. Mr. Cannizzaro also provides the perspective of a PG&E customer and California resident.
Public Company Board Service
•
Ross Stores, Inc. (2022 to present)
Past Board Service
•
KPMG LLP (2015 to 2018)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Kerry W. Cooper
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 53 |
•
Executive (Chair, PG&E Corporation)
•
Finance and Innovation
•
People and Compensation
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Former President and Chief Operating Officer, Rothy’s Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Large Scale Customer Experience
Financial Performance and Planning
Technology and Cybersecurity
|
Background
•
President and Chief Operating Officer, Rothy’s Inc. (Consumer goods) (2017 to 2020)
•
Chief Executive Officer, Choose Energy Inc. (National energy marketplace) (2013 to 2016)
•
Chief Operating Officer, Chief Marketing Officer, Modcloth (Consumer goods) (2010 to 2013)
•
Vice President, Global eCommerce (2010); Chief Marketing Officer, Vice President of Marketing and Strategy (2008 to 2010), Walmart.com (Consumer goods)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Ms. Cooper, the Corporation’s Independent Board Chair, has extensive experience implementing large-scale and innovative customer programs, which is critical as the Boards oversee the Companies’ efforts to deliver a regionalized hometown experience for its customers. As the Chief Executive Officer of Choose Energy, she built the brand and oversaw its expansion to all deregulated states and natural gas and solar, resulting in a sustainable business model. Ms. Cooper has a strong track record leading customer-focused, growth-oriented companies, and brings her knowledge and expertise from her role as an executive coach at The ExCo Group. She also provides the perspective of a PG&E customer and California resident.
Public Company Board Service
•
Upstart Holdings Inc. (2021 to present)
Other Board Service
•
Mozilla (2023 to present)
•
Fictiv (2023 to present)
Past Board Service
•
Gradient (2020 to present)
•
TPB Acquisition Corporation Inc. (2021 to 2023)
•
Fernish (2020 to 2023)
|
![]()
Leo P. Denault
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
February 2025 | 65 |
•
Audit
•
Finance and Innovation
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Senior Advisor, ArcLight Capital Partners, LLC
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Financial Performance and Planning
Risk Management
Utility Operations or Related
Engineering Experience
|
Background
•
Senior Advisor, ArcLight Capital Partners, LLC (Middle market infrastructure investor) (2023 to present)
•
Executive Chairman, Entergy Corporation (Electric and natural gas utility) (2022 to 2023)
•
Chief Executive Officer, Entergy Corporation (2013 to 2022)
•
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Entergy Corporation (2004 to 2013)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Denault brings decades of executive leadership experience in the energy sector with expertise in utility operations, strategic planning, and finance. Under his leadership at Entergy, Mr. Denault transformed the company into a premier utility with one of the nation's cleanest energy portfolios. Additionally, Mr. Denault brings nuclear operations experience from his time at Entergy and having previously served on the boards of directors for the Institute of Nuclear Power Operators and the World Association of Nuclear Operators Atlanta Centre.
Public Company Board Service
•
Huntington Ingalls Incorporated (2022 to present) (Chair of the Audit Committee)
Other Board Service
•
Alpha Generation (2024 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
Entergy Corporation (2013 to 2023) (Chair of the Board)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Jessica L. Denecour
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 63 |
•
Sustainability and Governance (Chair)
•
People and Compensation
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
•
Executive
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Former Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Varian Medical Systems
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Technology and Cybersecurity
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Risk Management
|
Background
•
Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer, Varian Medical Systems (Medical device manufacturer and software for cancer treatments) (2006 to 2017)
•
Vice President, Global IT Application and Solution Services and Global Infrastructure and Operations, Agilent Technologies, Inc. (Chemical analysis, life sciences, and diagnostics) (2000 to 2005)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Ms. Denecour has more than 30 years of experience leading global companies into the digital age. As a senior executive and Chief Information Officer, she gained a deep understanding of threats and mitigations in cybersecurity risk management, and experience overseeing investments in new, innovative technology. During her career, she led multiple IT transformations, built effective data privacy and security programs, and implemented state-of-the-art IT governance and systems. A long-time California resident and Utility customer, Ms. Denecour has also demonstrated a commitment to the community through her board work supporting gender parity in the boardroom, and creativity and lifelong learning in children.
Past Public Company Board Service
•
MobileIron Inc. (2017 to 2020) (Chair of the Cybersecurity Committee; Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee)
Past Board Service
•
Athena Alliance (2016 to 2018) (Founding member)
•
Children’s Discovery Museum of San Jose (2010 to 2017)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Mark E. Ferguson III
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 68 |
•
People and Compensation (Chair)
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
•
Executive
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Independent Defense and Aerospace Consultant
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Nuclear Generation Safety
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Management Incentives
|
Background
•
Independent Defense and Aerospace Consultant, MK3 Global LLC (2016 to present)
•
Senior Advisor, McKinsey & Company (2016 to 2020)
•
Commander of the U.S. Naval Forces in Europe and Africa (2014 to 2016); Vice Chief of Naval Operations (2011 to 2014), U.S. Navy
•
Chief of Naval Personnel, U.S. Navy (2008 to 2011)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Admiral Mark Ferguson, USN (ret.) brings experience in nuclear reactor operations and engineering, risk and change management, human resources, and cyber preparedness from his 38-year career in the U.S. Navy. Through his leadership positions, he directed the transformation of its personnel management system and education programs. His organization received the Workforce Magazine Optimas Award for innovative personnel policies supporting diversity and women in the workplace. Admiral Ferguson presently is a member of several veteran service organizations and holds a NACD certification in cyber risk oversight.
Public Company Board Service
•
VSE Corporation (2017 to present) (Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee)
Past Board Service
•
Center for Naval Analyses (2017 to 2021) (Chair of the Audit Committee)
|
||||||||||||||||
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W. Craig Fugate
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 65 |
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
•
Sustainability and Governance
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Principal, Craig Fugate Consulting, LLC
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Wildfire Safety, Prevention and Mitigation
Climate Change and Climate Resilience
Nuclear Generation Safety
|
Background
•
Principal, Craig Fugate Consulting, LLC (Emergency management and crisis response) (2017 to present)
•
Senior Advisor, Interagency Readiness Solutions (Emergency management support) (2017 to present)
•
Chief Resilience Officer, One Concern (Emergency management technology) (2017 to 2022)
•
Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) (Appointed by the President, Senate Confirmed) (2009 to 2017)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Fugate has a deep background in emergency management and crisis response at the county, state, and federal level. During his time at FEMA, Mr. Fugate led the organization through multiple record-breaking disaster years and oversaw the Federal Government’s response to major events, such as the Joplin and Moore tornadoes, Hurricane Sandy, Hurricane Matthew, and the 2016 Louisiana flooding. Mr. Fugate has a strong track record in establishing a robust safety culture and driving a community-oriented approach to emergency management.
Public Company Board Service
•
Genasys (2024 to present)
Other Board Service
•
America’s Public Television Stations (2017 to present)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Arno L. Harris
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 55 |
•
Audit
•
Sustainability and Governance
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Managing Partner, AHC
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Innovation and Technology in the Clean Energy or Utility Industry
Climate Change and Climate Resilience
Renewable Energy and Related Engineering Experience
|
Background
•
Managing Partner, AHC (Clean energy and transportation consulting) (2015 to present)
•
Chief Executive Officer, Alta Motors (Electric motorcycle manufacturer) (2017 to 2018)
•
Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Recurrent Energy, LLC (Utility-scale solar project developer) (2006 to 2015)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Harris has spent the last 25 years starting and growing successful businesses in high tech, clean energy, and electric mobility. He is passionate about solving climate change through the intersection of technology, business and public policy. He advises startups and growth companies, helping them to raise capital and achieve scale. His understanding of energy, sustainability, and commercial operations within California’s regulatory environment contributes to the Boards’ effective oversight of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and climate change issues. Mr. Harris is also a longtime California resident and PG&E customer.
Other Board Service
•
Revolv Global Inc. (2023 to present)
•
Gator Holdings, LLC (2022 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
ArcLight Clean Transition II (2021 to 2022)
•
Azure Power Global Limited (2016 to 2022) (Chair of the Audit Committee; Chair of the Capital Committee)
•
ArcLight Clean Transition Corp. (2020 to 2021)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Carlos M. Hernandez
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
March 2022 | 70 |
•
Audit
•
Finance and Innovation
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Former Chief Executive Officer, Fluor Corporation
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Risk Management
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Community Leadership
|
Background
•
Chief Executive Officer (2019 to 2020); Interim Chief Executive Officer (2019); Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer, and Secretary (2007 to 2019), Fluor Corporation (Engineering and construction)
•
General Counsel and Secretary, Arcelor Mittal Americas (Steel and mining) (2004 to 2007)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Hernandez brings decades of experience in legal affairs, risk management, financial restructuring, and corporate governance and compliance. He has a strong foundation in law, business, and engineering, having served as General Counsel of publicly-traded companies in engineering, procurement, construction (EPC), manufacturing, and distribution. During his time at Fluor Corporation, he developed, led, and executed project risk assessment, established new selectivity criteria, and restored confidence in the company’s financial reporting. He has experience with environmental and safety matters, as well as government affairs.
Public Company Board Service
•
Granite Construction, Inc. (2024 to present)
Other Board Service
•
Steward Health Care System (2021 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
Fluor Corporation (2019 to 2020)
Past Board Service
•
ICA / Fluor (2016 to 2019)
•
NuScale Power LLC (2011 to 2019)
|
![]()
John O. Larsen
|
Director Since | Age |
Board Committees (expected)
|
||||||||||||||
Nominated in 2025
|
61 |
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
•
People and Compensation
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Retired Chief Executive Officer, Alliant Energy
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Utility Operations or Related Engineering Experience
Public Policy
Large Scale Customer Experience
|
Background
•
Chairman of the Board and Executive Chairman (2024); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2023); Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer (2019 to 2023), Alliant Energy Corporation (Electric and natural gas utility holding company)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Larsen provides deep utility operations and large-scale customer engagement from his 36-year career at Alliant Energy, where he held key leadership positions across the regulated utility’s business sectors, including engineering, power generation, and strategic planning. During his tenure as chief executive, Mr. Larsen spearheaded Alliant Energy’s Clean Energy Blueprint, which guided the company’s investment in a sustainable and diversified electric portfolio, and more adaptable and resilient infrastructure. He is a strong advocate of fostering community vitality and serves on local and industry boards, including the Edison Electric Institute and Electric Power Research Institute.
Public Company Board Service
•
TruStage Financial Group, Inc (2021 to present)
•
Alliant Energy Corporation (2019 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
American Transmission Company Management, Inc. (2019 to 2024) (Lead Director)
Past Board Service
•
American Gas Association (2022 to 2024) (Advisory Director)
•
Electric Power Research Institute (2021 to 2024)
•
Edison Electric Institute (2019 to 2024)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Patricia K. Poppe
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committee | ||||||||||||||
January 2021 | 56 |
•
Executive
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Chief Executive Officer, PG&E Corporation
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Utility Operations or Related Engineering Experience
Financial Performance and Planning
|
Background
•
Chief Executive Officer, PG&E Corporation (2021 to present)
•
President and Chief Executive Officer, CMS Energy Corporation and Consumers Energy (2016 to 2020)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Ms. Poppe brings over 15 years of experience, including as chief executive, in the highly regulated utility industry. Under her leadership, CMS Energy and Consumers Energy earned consistent industry recognition and maintained strong operational and financial performance. PG&E values Ms. Poppe’s extensive utility experience championing safety and workplace equity, developing strong working relationships with labor, and building broad support for clean energy.
Other Board Service
•
Electric Power Research Institute (2021 to present)
•
Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (2021 to present)
•
AEGIS Insurance Services, Inc. (2020 to present)
•
Edison Electric Institute (2016 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
Whirlpool (2019 to 2024)
Past Board Service
•
California Chamber of Commerce (2022)
•
American Gas Association (2016 to 2021)
|
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Sumeet Singh
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committee | ||||||||||||||
March 2023 | 46 |
•
None
|
|||||||||||||||
Current Position
Executive Vice President, Operations and Chief Operating Officer, Pacific Gas and
Electric Company
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Wildfire Safety, Preparedness, Prevention, Mitigation, Response, and Recovery
Utility Operations or Related Engineering Experience
Risk Management
|
Background
•
Executive Vice President, Operations and Chief Operating Officer, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (Utility)
(2023 to present)
•
Executive Vice President, Chief Risk and Chief Safety Officer (2022 to 2023); Senior Vice President and Chief Risk Officer (2021), PG&E Corporation and the Utility
•
Interim President and Chief Risk Officer of the Utility and Senior Vice President and Chief Risk Officer, PG&E Corporation (2020 to 2021)
•
Gas Integrity & Safety Officer, Picarro Inc. (Gas analyzer manufacturer) (2020)
•
Vice President, Asset Management and Community Wildfire Safety Program, Utility (2018 to 2020)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Singh provides the Utility Board with knowledge of the Utility’s operations, experienced utility leadership, and engineering background. He also brings experience in safety, risk, electric and gas operations, and asset management developed during his career with PG&E. As the Utility’s Executive Vice President, Operations and Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Singh focuses on safety, increasing connectivity among operational groups, and promoting operational excellence.
Other Board Service
•
California Chamber of Commerce (2023 to present)
•
GTI Energy (2021 to present)
|
||||||||||||||||
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William L. Smith
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
October 2019 | 67 |
•
Finance and Innovation (Chair)
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
•
Executive
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Retired President of Technology Operations, AT&T Services, Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Technology and Cybersecurity
Financial Performance and Planning
Utility Operations or Related Engineering Experience
|
Background
•
Interim Chief Executive Officer, PG&E Corporation (2020 to 2021)
•
President, Technology Operations (2014 to 2016); President, Network Operations (2008 to 2014), AT&T (Telecommunications)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Smith brings in-depth knowledge of PG&E’s operations to the Boards, having served as the Interim Chief Executive Officer in 2020 while PG&E Corporation searched for a long-term leader. He also brings decades of technology and strategy experience from his 37-year tenure at AT&T. This includes large-scale integration and modernization of vast infrastructure networks, identification and implementation of new technologies, and a track record of delivering on commitments to public and employee safety. Additionally, Mr. Smith offers expertise in cybersecurity, having led the operational cybersecurity team at AT&T and having had significant interaction with the NSA, FBI, and DHS on cyber matters.
Other Board Service
•
Zayo Communications (2023 to present)
Past Public Company Board Service
•
OCLARO, Inc. (2012 to 2018)
Past Board Service
•
Apex Global Infrastructure Services, LLC (2017 to 2024) (Chair of the Board)
|
||||||||||||||||
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Benjamin F. Wilson
|
Director Since | Age | Current Board Committees | ||||||||||||||
July 2020 | 73 |
•
Audit (Chair)
•
Sustainability and Governance
•
Executive
|
|||||||||||||||
Recent Position
Retired Chairman, Beveridge & Diamond P.C.
|
|||||||||||||||||
Skills Matrix
Workforce and/or Public Safety
Climate Change and Climate Resilience
Public Policy
|
Background
•
Chairman (2017 to 2021); Managing Principal (2008 to 2016), Beveridge & Diamond PC (Environmental law practice)
•
Adjunct Professor, Howard University (2004 to present)
Experience, Skills, and Expertise
Mr. Wilson brings 45 years of practice in both state and federal courts on commercial litigation and environmental regulation and litigation matters. During his leadership at Beveridge & Diamond PC, he served as lead counsel in numerous complex environmental and regulatory matters for major consumer product corporations, retailers, oil and gas companies, municipalities, and developers. Mr. Wilson’s service as the Court-appointed Monitor for the Duke Energy coal ash spill remediation project and as Deputy Monitor in the Volkswagen AG emissions proceedings provides an important perspective to the Board. Additionally, Mr. Wilson offers deep experience on environmental justice issues and is a recognized leader on diversity and inclusion issues in the legal profession.
Other Board Service
•
APCO Worldwide (2021 to present)
•
DC Bar Foundation (2020 to present)
Past Board Service
•
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company (2008 to 2023) (Lead Director)
•
Environmental Law Institute (2017 to 2022)
•
Dartmouth College (2012 to 2020) (Chair of the Audit Committee)
|
||||||||||||||||
Committee Memberships | Other Public Boards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Independent | Diverse | Age | Tenure | A | FI | PC | SNO | SG | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rajat Bahri | • |
•
|
60 | 5 | • | • | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cheryl F. Campbell | • | • | 65 | 6 | * | • | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Edward G. Cannizzaro | • | • | 64 | 2 | • | • | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kerry W. Cooper | • | • | 53 | 5 | • | • | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Leo P. Denault
|
• | 65 | 0 | • | • | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jessica L. Denecour | • | • | 63 | 5 | • | • | * | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mark E. Ferguson III | • | 68 | 5 | * | • | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
W. Craig Fugate | • | 65 | 5 | • | • | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Arno L. Harris | • |
55
|
5 | • | • | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Carlos M. Hernandez | • | • | 70 | 3 | • | • | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
John O. Larsen
|
• | 61 | 0 | • | • | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | • | 56 | 4 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | • | 46 | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
William L. Smith | • | 67 | 5 | * | • | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Benjamin F. Wilson | • | • | 73 | 5 | * | • |
A
= Audit Committees
|
FI
= Finance and Innovation Committee
|
PC
= People and Compensation Committee
|
SNO
= Safety, Nuclear, and Oversight Committees
|
SG
= Sustainability and Governance Committee
|
*
= Chair
|
Skills Matrix | ||||||||||||||
• |
Wildfire safety, preparedness, prevention, mitigation, response, and/or recovery
|
• | Workforce safety and public safety | |||||||||||
• | Technology and cybersecurity | • | Nuclear generation safety | |||||||||||
• |
Natural gas transmission, distribution, operation, and safety
|
• | Public policy (legal, regulatory, or government) | |||||||||||
• | Leadership in the energy or utility industry | • | Utility operation or related engineering experience | |||||||||||
• |
Innovation and technology in the clean energy or utility industry
|
• | Risk management (including enterprise risk management) | |||||||||||
• | Climate change mitigation or climate resilience | • | Renewable energy and related engineering experience | |||||||||||
• | Financial performance and planning | • | Financial literacy | |||||||||||
• | Audit | • | Management incentives | |||||||||||
• | Labor relations | • | Large-scale customer experience | |||||||||||
• | Public company board experience | • | Community leadership |
Board Composition and Policies |
Shareholder Rights
|
|||||||||||||
• |
All non-executive directors are independent, including Board chairs
|
• |
Takeover defenses
—
directors are elected annually
|
|||||||||||
• |
All independent committees (other than the Executive Committees)
|
• |
Majority vote for directors, with mandatory resignation policy and plurality carve-out for contested elections
|
|||||||||||
• |
Separation of leadership roles of the Chair of the Board and the Chief Executive Officer
|
• |
Proxy access provisions consistent with market standards —three percent for three years
|
|||||||||||
• |
Director over-boarding policy prohibiting service on more than three public company boards
|
• | No supermajority vote requirements | |||||||||||
• |
Regular executive session meetings without management
|
• | One share, one vote | |||||||||||
• |
Board oversight of key areas, including risk, cybersecurity, safety, sustainability, climate resilience, compliance, and ethics
|
• |
No anti-takeover poison pill
—
shareholder approval required for adoption
|
|||||||||||
• | Annual Board and Committee evaluations | • | Confidential voting policy for uncontested elections | |||||||||||
• |
Ongoing director education
|
• |
Policy limiting certain types of services provided by the independent auditor
|
|||||||||||
• |
Executive and director stock ownership guidelines
|
• |
Right to amend bylaws
|
Committee Name | Company | Scope of Responsibility/Topics Discussed | |||||||||
Executive | PG&E Corporation and Utility | Exercises powers and performs duties of the applicable Board, subject to limits imposed by state law. | |||||||||
Audit
(1)
|
PG&E Corporation and Utility | Oversees and monitors: | |||||||||
• | Integrity of the company financial statements, and financial and accounting practices | ||||||||||
• | Internal control over financial reporting, and external and internal auditing programs | ||||||||||
• | Selection and oversight of the companies’ Independent Auditor | ||||||||||
• |
The compliance and ethics program, including but not limited to, evaluating the effectiveness of such program
|
||||||||||
• | Compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, in concert with other Board committees | ||||||||||
• |
Related person transactions
|
||||||||||
• |
Guidelines and policies for risk management, and the allocation of specific risks to committees for oversight
|
||||||||||
People and Compensation | PG&E Corporation | Oversees matters relating to compensation and benefits, including: | |||||||||
• | Compensation for non-employee directors | ||||||||||
• | Development, selection, and compensation of policy-making officers | ||||||||||
• | Annual approval of the corporate goals and objectives of the PG&E Corporation CEO and the Utility CEO (or if that position is not filled, the PEOs) | ||||||||||
• | Management evaluation and officer succession planning | ||||||||||
• | Employment, compensation, and benefits policies and practices | ||||||||||
• |
Human capital management
|
||||||||||
Finance and Innovation
(2)
|
PG&E Corporation | Oversees matters relating to financial and investment planning, policies, and risks, including: | |||||||||
• | Financial and investment plans and strategies, including a multi-year financial outlook | ||||||||||
• | Dividend policy | ||||||||||
• | Proposed capital projects and divestitures | ||||||||||
• | Financing plans | ||||||||||
• |
Strategic investments in technology, clean energy, and technology infrastructure
|
||||||||||
• | Strategic plans and initiatives for potential investments in businesses, joint ventures, mergers, acquisitions, and other business combinations involving the companies | ||||||||||
Sustainability and Governance
|
PG&E Corporation | Oversees matters relating to selection of directors, corporate governance, and Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) issues, including: | |||||||||
• | Recommendation of Board candidates, including a review of skills and characteristics required of Board members | ||||||||||
• | Selection of the chairs and membership of Board committees | ||||||||||
• | Corporate governance matters, including the companies’ governance principles and practices, and the review of shareholder proposals | ||||||||||
• | Evaluation of the Boards’ performance and effectiveness | ||||||||||
• | Climate change and climate resilience planning |
Committee Name | Company | Scope of Responsibility/Topics Discussed | |||||||||
• | Environmental compliance | ||||||||||
• | Charitable and political contributions | ||||||||||
Safety and Nuclear Oversight |
PG&E Corporation and Utility
|
Oversees matters relating to safety, risk, wildfire safety, and operational performance, including:
|
|||||||||
• | Safety programs, promotion of safety culture, and long-term and short-term safety plans | ||||||||||
• | Wildfire risk reduction and performance against the wildfire safety commitments made by the Utility | ||||||||||
• | Operational performance and risks related to the Utility’s nuclear, generation, and gas and electric transmission and distribution facilities | ||||||||||
• | Cybersecurity |
Boards
|
Audit
(1)
|
People & Compensation | Finance & Innovation | Sustainability & Governance |
Safety & Nuclear Oversight
(1)
|
|||||||||||||||
Number of Meetings in 2024
|
7
|
9
|
6
|
5
|
4 |
7
|
(1)
|
Meetings of the Corporation and Utility committees are concurrent, and numbers reflect attendance for both committees.
|
Board and Committee Risk Oversight Responsibilities | ||||||||
Boards:
Oversee risks associated with major investments and strategic initiatives and cyber-security
|
People and Compensation:
Oversees potential risks arising from the companies’ compensation policies and practices
|
|||||||
Audit:
Oversees enterprise risk program, and guidelines and policies that govern the processes by which major risks are assessed and managed. Allocates oversight of specific key risks to committees.
|
Safety and Nuclear Oversight:
Oversees risks arising from operations, including wildfire, employee and public safety, electric, gas and generation operations, other risks associated with facilities, emergency response, and cybersecurity
|
|||||||
Finance and Innovation:
Oversees risks associated with financial markets and liquidity
|
Sustainability and Governance:
Oversees risks associated with climate change
|
The Boards | • | Oversee ESG risks and opportunities, including the direction of the companies’ opportunities in decarbonization, electric vehicles, greening the gas supply, and helping California define and implement green energy policy | ||||||
• | Review corporate goals related to safety, reliability, people management, and sustainability commitments | |||||||
• |
Engage with ERGs to support the companies’ inclusion and belonging initiatives
|
|||||||
Safety and Nuclear Oversight | • | Oversee the risks associated with the impact of climate change on operations, assets and facilities, and planned mitigations | ||||||
• | Oversee the companies’ programs related to public, employee and contractor safety, and operational excellence, including training | |||||||
Sustainability and Governance
|
• |
Considers the balance of experience and skills when identifying Board nominees
|
||||||
• | Oversees corporate sustainability issues, such as environmental compliance and leadership, climate change resilience, and community investments | |||||||
• | Includes an annual review of PG&E’s sustainability practices and performance | |||||||
People and Compensation | • | Approves incentive compensation structures, which reinforce sustainability commitments | ||||||
• |
Oversees human capital management, including workforce planning and management succession
|
|||||||
Finance and Innovation | • | Approves capital budgets and investments in zero-carbon technologies and grid modernization |
Annual Review
|
At the first meeting of each year, each company’s Audit Committee reviews, approves, and/or ratifies related person transactions (other than the types of transactions that are excluded from disclosure under Item 404(a)) with values exceeding $10,000 in which either company participates and in which any “Related Person” has a material direct or indirect interest. For these purposes, “Related Person” includes (1) any director, nominee for director, or executive officer, (2) holders of greater than 5 percent of that company’s voting securities, and (3) those parties’ immediate family members.
|
||||
|
|
||||
Periodic Review
|
After the annual review and approval of related person transactions, if either company wishes to enter into a new related person transaction, then that transaction must be either pre-approved or ratified by the applicable Audit Committee. If a transaction is not ratified in accordance with the Policy, management will make all reasonable efforts to cancel or annul that transaction.
|
||||
Where it is not practical or desirable to wait until the next Audit Committee meeting to obtain approval or ratification, the Chair of the applicable Audit Committee may elect to approve a particular related person transaction. If the Chair of the applicable Audit Committee has an interest in the proposed related person transaction, then that transaction may be reviewed and approved by another independent and disinterested member of the applicable Audit Committee. In either case, the individual approving the transaction must report such approval to the full Audit Committee at the next regularly scheduled meeting.
|
|||||
When reviewing any related person transaction, the Audit Committees consider whether the transaction is on terms comparable to those that could be obtained in arm’s-length dealings with an unrelated third party, and whether the transaction is inconsistent with the best interests of the companies and their shareholders. The Policy also requires that each Audit Committee disclose to the respective Board any material related person transactions.
Since January 1, 2024, all related person transactions have been approved or ratified by the applicable Audit Committee in accordance with this Policy.
|
Annual Retainer
(1)
|
Per Quarter
|
Annual
|
||||||||||||
Non-Employee Directors
|
$30,000 | $120,000 | ||||||||||||
Corporation Chair of the Board |
$20,000 additional
|
$80,000 additional
|
||||||||||||
Utility Chair of the Board
|
$5,000 additional | $20,000 additional | ||||||||||||
Committee Chair Additional Retainers | ||||||||||||||
Audit Committees
|
$7,500 | $30,000 | ||||||||||||
People and Compensation Committee | $5,000 | $20,000 | ||||||||||||
Safety and Nuclear Oversight Committees
|
$5,000 | $20,000 | ||||||||||||
Finance and Innovation Committee
|
$5,000
|
$20,000
|
||||||||||||
Sustainability and Governance Committee
|
$5,000 | $20,000 |
Annual Equity Awards | ||||||||||||||
Non-Employee Directors |
N/A
|
$180,000
|
||||||||||||
Corporation Chair of the Board
|
N/A
|
$100,000 additional
|
(1)
|
No additional retainer, equity award, or per-meeting fee will be paid by the Utility for any quarter during which the director is paid a retainer, equity award, or per-meeting fee from the Corporation for the same role. | ||||
|
|
Name
|
Fees Earned Or Paid in Cash ($)
(1)
|
Stock Awards ($)
(2)
|
Option Awards ($)
(3)
|
All Other Compensation ($)
|
Total ($)
|
||||||||||||
Rajat Bahri | 120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
Cheryl F. Campbell | 160,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 339,992 | ||||||||||||
Edward G. Cannizzaro
|
120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
Kerry W. Cooper | 133,261 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 313,253 | ||||||||||||
Jessica L. Denecour | 140,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 319,992 | ||||||||||||
Mark E. Ferguson III | 140,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 319,992 | ||||||||||||
Robert C. Flexon
(4)
|
166,848 | 279,986 | 0 | 0 | 446,834 | ||||||||||||
W. Craig Fugate | 120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
Arno L. Harris | 120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
Carlos M. Hernandez | 120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
Michael R. Niggli | 120,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 299,992 | ||||||||||||
William L. Smith | 140,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 319,992 | ||||||||||||
Benjamin F. Wilson | 150,000 | 179,992 | 0 | 0 | 329,992 |
Name |
Beneficial
Stock Ownership (1)(2) |
Percent of
Class (3) |
Common
Stock Equivalents (4) |
Total | ||||||||||
Rajat Bahri
(5)
|
51,831 | * | 0 | 51,831 | ||||||||||
Cheryl F. Campbell
(5)
|
54,165 | * | 0 | 54,165 | ||||||||||
Edward G. Cannizzaro
(5)
|
10,877 | * | 0 | 10,877 | ||||||||||
Kerry W. Cooper
(5)
|
39,439 | * | 9,266 | 48,705 | ||||||||||
Leo P. Denault
(5)
|
6,300 | * | 0 | 6,300 | ||||||||||
Jessica L. Denecour
(5)
|
50,102 | * | 0 | 50,102 | ||||||||||
Mark E. Ferguson III
(5)
|
48,683 | * | 0 | 48,683 | ||||||||||
W. Craig Fugate
(5)
|
48,661 | * | 0 | 48,661 | ||||||||||
Arno L. Harris
(5)
|
63,525 | * | 0 | 63,525 | ||||||||||
Carlos M. Hernandez
(5)
|
25,594 | * | 0 | 25,594 | ||||||||||
John O. Larsen
(5)
|
0 | * | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||
Michael R. Niggli
(5)
|
49,167 | * | 0 | 49,167 | ||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe
(5)(6)
|
1,895,210 | * | 0 | 1,895,210 | ||||||||||
Sumeet Singh
(5)(6)
|
185,103 | * | 0 | 185,103 | ||||||||||
William L. Smith
(5)
|
222,072 | * | 0 | 222,072 | ||||||||||
Benjamin F. Wilson
(5)
|
11,532 | * | 37,256 | 48,788 | ||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
(6)
|
17,862 | * | 0 | 17,862 | ||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke
(6)
|
32,487 | * | 0 | 32,487 | ||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman
(6)
|
116,169 | * | 0 | 116,169 | ||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos
(6)
|
204,917 | * | 0 | 204,917 | ||||||||||
John R. Simon
(6)
|
445,690 | * | 0 | 445,690 | ||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
(6)
|
14,940 | * | 0 | 14,940 | ||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
|
156,526 | * | 0 | 156,526 | ||||||||||
All PG&E Corporation directors, director nominees, and current executive officers as a group (23 persons)
|
3,839,400 | * | 46,521 | 3,885,921 | ||||||||||
All Utility directors, director nominees, and current executive officers as a group (21 persons)
|
3,272,675 | * | 46,521 | 3,319,196 |
Class of Stock
(1)
|
Name and Address of
Beneficial Owner |
Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership |
Percent
of Class |
||||||||||||||
Pacific Gas and Electric Company stock
(2)
|
PG&E Corporation
(3)
300 Lakeside Drive
Oakland, CA 94612
|
264,374,809 |
96.2%
|
||||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
The Vanguard Group Inc.
100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, PA 19355 |
248,207,725
|
(4)
|
11.3%
|
|||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
FMR LLC
245 Summer Street, Boston, MA 02210 |
190,204,571
|
(5)
|
8.7%
|
|||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
BlackRock, Inc.
50 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10001 |
167,140,614
|
(6)
|
7.6%
|
|||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
383 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10179
|
121,788,400 |
(7)
|
5.6%
|
|||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
Massachusetts Financial Services Company
111 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02199
|
118,822,231
|
(8)
|
5.4%
|
|||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation common stock |
State Street Corporation
1 Congress Street, Suite 1
Boston, MA 02113-2016
|
111,205,230 |
(9)
|
5.1%
|
|||||||||||||
Pacific Gas and Electric Company first preferred stock |
Stonehill Capital Management LLC, et al.
320 Park Avenue, 26th Floor, New York, New York, 10022 |
921,694
|
(10)
|
8.9%
|
Board Recommendation |
What are you voting on?
PG&E Corporation and the Utility each asks its respective shareholders to approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation paid for 2024 to the companies’ executive officers named in the Summary Compensation Table of this Joint Proxy Statement, as disclosed pursuant to Item 402 of Regulation S-K, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the compensation tables, and the accompanying narrative discussion.
|
||||||||||
![]() |
Vote “FOR”
|
Each of PG&E Corporation and the Utility believes that its executive compensation policies and practices for 2024 were effective in tying a significant portion of pay to performance, while providing competitive compensation to attract, retain, and motivate talented executives, and aligning the interests of our executive officers with those of our shareholders. At the Joint Annual Meeting in 2024, shareholders showed strong levels of support for the 2022 officer compensation program.
PG&E Corporation’s officer compensation programs for 2024 (which also cover officers of the Utility) generally are designed to meet four objectives. These objectives, and how they were met for 2024, are discussed in more detail the Compensation Discussion & Analysis (CD&A), which can be found immediately following this Proposal 2. These objectives are summarized here.
|
Summary of Objectives
|
|||||||||||||
•
A significant portion of every officer’s compensation should be tied directly to PG&E Corporation’s performance without promoting excessive risk-taking.
All variable elements of 2024 annual compensation for our Named Executive Officers (NEOs) were tied to corporate operational and/or financial performance. This provides a direct connection between compensation and performance in the achievement of both key operating results and long-term shareholder value creation. For Patricia K. Poppe, the PG&E Corporation Chief Executive Officer (CEO), approximately 90 percent of 2024 target compensation was tied to corporate performance. For the other NEOs, approximately 74 percent of average 2024 target compensation was tied to corporate performance.
The People and Compensation Committee’s independent compensation consultant during 2024, Meridian Compensation Partners, LLC (Meridian), assessed the pay programs and advised that for 2024 the design of the companies’ incentive pay plans does not encourage excessive risk-taking. As such, incentive plan design posed a low likelihood of incenting employees to engage in behaviors that are likely to have an adverse material impact on the companies.
• A significant component of officer compensation should be tied to PG&E Corporation’s long-term performance for shareholders in the form of long-term incentive awards.
Annual long-term incentive awards for 2024 to NEOs were made entirely in the form of performance share units (PSUs), which emphasize safety, our customers, and our financial stability. Awards made in 2024 can be earned depending on performance related to metrics in the areas of public safety (weighted at 40 percent), customer experience (weighted at 25 percent) and relative total shareholder return (TSR) (weighted at 35 percent). PSUs will vest, if at all, at the end of a three-year period, and their value is tied to the price of PG&E Corporation common stock.
• Target direct compensation (base salary and target incentives) should be competitive with the compensation for comparable officers in the 2024 Pay Comparator Group.
Target direct compensation for NEOs in 2024 was within competitive market range in the 2024 Pay Comparator Group.
• Officer compensation program complies with legal requirements.
The officer compensation structure is designed and reviewed to reflect both the letter and spirit of legal requirements.
|
||||||||||||||
This CD&A provides our shareholders and other stakeholders with information about PG&E Corporation’s and the Utility's performance, compensation framework, compensation decisions, and associated governance for our NEOs in 2024.
PG&E Corporation is a holding company whose primary operating subsidiary is the Utility, a public utility operating in northern and central California. The Utility generates revenues mainly through making investments in operating assets and earning an authorized rate of return on those assets through regulated rates for the sale and delivery of electricity and natural gas to customers. The compensation program described in this CD&A applies to PG&E Corporation and the Utility, with the same philosophy, structure, metrics, and goals applying to both companies.
As of December 31, 2024, the companies had approximately 28,400 regular coworkers, ten of whom were employees of PG&E Corporation. The following table summarizes our 2024 NEOs who were Executive Officers as of December 31, 2024. As of December 31, 2024, three individuals concurrently served as principal executive officers (PEOs) of the Utility: Mr. Glickman, Ms. Santos, and Mr. Singh.
|
|||||||||||||||||
1. Executive Summary
|
45 | ||||||||||||||||
2. Compensation Design | 48 | ||||||||||||||||
3. Compensation Governance | 52 | ||||||||||||||||
4. 2024 Compensation Decision and Outcomes
|
59 | ||||||||||||||||
5. 2025 Compensation Structure
|
68 | ||||||||||||||||
6. Additional Information | 69 | ||||||||||||||||
PG&E Corporation |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||
(positions as of 12/31/24)
|
||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe |
Carolyn J. Burke
|
John R. Simon | ||||||||||||
Chief Executive Officer |
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
|
Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer | ||||||||||||
Pacific Gas and Electric Company |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||
(positions as of 12/31/24)
|
||||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman |
Marlene M. Santos
(1)
|
Sumeet Singh
(1)
|
||||||||||||
Executive Vice President, Engineering, Planning & Strategy |
Executive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer and Enterprise Solutions Officer
|
Executive Vice President, Operations and Chief Operating Officer | ||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
(2)(4)
|
Ajay Waghray
(3)(4)
|
Stephanie N. Williams
(5)
|
||||||||||||
Executive Vice President, Chief People Officer
|
Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer
|
Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Controller
|
(1) |
Also served as NEOs of PG&E Corporation during 2024.
|
||||
(2) |
Mr. Awada was elected Executive Vice President, Chief People Officer of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company, effective January 16, 2024.
|
||||
(3) |
Mr. Waghray was elected Executive Vice President and Chief Information of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, effective January 1, 2024. He has served as Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of PG&E Corporation since July 1, 2023.
|
||||
(4)
|
As of December 31, 2024, also held these positions at PG&E Corporation, although do not have NEO status at PG&E Corporation.
|
||||
(5)
|
Also served as Vice President and Controller of PG&E Corporation during 2024.
|
![]() |
Breakthrough year for progress on wildfire risk mitigation,
with a second consecutive year of zero major fires. Additionally, for long-term wildfire risk reduction, we completed 366 miles of system hardening including 258 miles of underground powerlines and 108 miles of stronger poles and overhead powerlines in the highest fire-risk areas during 2024.
|
|||||||
![]() |
Delivered strong financial performance.
In 2024 the quarterly dividend payment was increased. PG&E Corporation also delivered GAAP EPS of $1.05, representing 10% growth over 2023 and non-GAAP core EPS of $1.36, representing 10.6% growth over 2023.
|
|||||||
![]() |
Signed a $15 billion loan guarantee agreement with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Loan Program Office.
This loan will finance grid modernization projects and potentially save customers up to $1 billion on a net present value basis through lower-cost financing.
|
|||||||
![]() |
A second consecutive year of achieving several hundred million dollars of operating cost savings.
|
|||||||
![]() |
Delivered industry-leading three-year cumulative total shareholder return of 65%,
the highest among our peers over the period ending December 31, 2024.
|
Core Pay Component
and Rationale
(1)
|
2024 PG&E Corporation CEO Target Direct Compensation Mix
(2)
|
2024 NEO
Target Direct Compensation Mix
(3)
|
2024 Performance Measures
|
Performance
Period |
Form of
Payment |
||||||||||||
Base Salary
Fixed pay to attract and retain talent; takes account of scope, performance and experience |
![]() |
![]() |
N/A | N/A | Cash | ||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentives
Variable pay to incent and recognize performance in areas of short-term strategic importance |
![]() |
![]() |
• Safety
• Customer
• Financial
• Individual
Specific metrics associated with each category; see below
|
One year | Cash | ||||||||||||
Long-Term Incentives
Equity-based pay to incent and recognize performance in areas of long-term strategic importance, promote retention and stability, and align executives with shareholders |
![]() |
![]() |
• Safety
• Customer
• Financial
Specific metrics associated with each category; see below
|
Three years | PSUs |
Objective |
|
How we achieve this
|
||||||||||||
Pay for performance |
![]() |
• |
At-risk performance-based pay represents a significant proportion of total target compensation, accounting for approximately 91% of Corporation CEO target compensation and an average of 74% for other NEOs in 2024.
|
|||||||||||
• | Short- and long-term incentives are earned based on performance reflecting safety, customer, operational, and financial goals, including shareholder returns. | |||||||||||||
• | Metrics and goals are designed so as not to promote excessive risk-taking. | |||||||||||||
Align with shareholders |
![]() |
• |
Annual equity-based compensation, the value of which reflects movements in our stock price, accounted for more than 75% of Corporation CEO target compensation and an average of approximately 56% for other NEOs in 2024.
|
|||||||||||
• |
Total shareholder return relative to our Performance Comparator Group is used as a performance measure.
|
|||||||||||||
Provide market competitive pay |
![]() |
• |
Target direct compensation is set to be competitive with comparable roles in our Pay Comparator Group.
|
|||||||||||
• |
Our compensation structure provides for the attraction and retention of talented and experienced executives, while ensuring alignment with long-term shareholder interests.
|
|||||||||||||
Comply with legal requirements |
![]() |
• |
Officer compensation is designed and reviewed to reflect both the letter and spirit of legal requirements.
|
We do...
|
We do not...
|
||||||||||
![]() |
Pay for performance |
Majority of compensation is at risk, linked to company performance and shareholder interests
.
|
![]() |
Pay tax gross-ups |
No tax gross-ups are provided, except for those generally available to all management
coworkers
, such as for one-time relocation expenses upon hire
.
|
||||||||
![]() |
Engage with stakeholders |
Ongoing discussions with key institutional investors and regulators, including on the topic of compensation
.
|
![]() |
Permit hedging or pledging |
Our policy prohibits hedging and pledging of either company’s stock.
|
||||||||
![]() |
Require meaningful ownership |
Executives subject to share ownership and retention requirements
.
|
![]() |
Reprice stock options |
Any repricing would require advance shareholder approval.
|
||||||||
![]() |
Engage an independent consultant |
The People and
Compensation Committee engages a consultant and annually assesses independence
.
|
![]() |
Provide additional executive service credits |
No granting of additional service under the Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
.
|
||||||||
![]() |
Operate clawback provisions |
All incentive compensation and severance for certain officers is subject to clawback or recoupment, with provisions beyond those required by the listing exchange
.
|
![]() |
Pay unearned dividends |
No dividends or dividend equivalents are paid on unvested equity awards.
|
||||||||
![]() |
Have a double trigger |
Change in control severance requires a change in control and involuntary termination (includes constructive termination for good reason)
.
|
![]() |
Provide excessive benefits or perquisites |
Benefits and perquisites are limited,
and do not exceed
market norms
.
|
Requirement
(1)
|
How We Achieve This
(2)
|
||||
Compensation should be structured to promote safety as a priority and to ensure public safety.
|
•
Incentive plan metrics are weighted toward customer and workforce welfare, placing a priority on public safety.
•
All long-term incentive awards also incent customer and public welfare directly through customer and safety focused performance metrics and indirectly due to their exposure to absolute and relative stock performance.
|
||||
A significant portion of long-term incentive compensation shall be based on safety, customer satisfaction, engagement, and welfare; the remaining portion may be based on financial performance or other considerations.
|
•
PSU metrics promote customer experience and public safety.
|
Requirement
(1)
|
How We Achieve This
(2)
|
||||
Compensation should be structured to promote utility financial stability.
|
•
Incentive plan metrics collectively promote customer, public, and workforce safety, thus contributing indirectly to financial stability.
•
Short-term incentive includes a core earnings per share metric, a measure sensitive to dilution incurred during emergence from Chapter 11. Starting in 2023, the short-term incentive also includes an operating cash flow metric which assesses financial health, an indicator of financial stability.
•
Long-term incentive awards are subject to a financial or relative TSR metric that reduces payouts if our relative returns lag those of other utilities.
|
||||
Incentive compensation should be based on meeting performance metrics that are measurable and enforceable.
|
•
Incentive plan metrics are designed to be objective, measurable, enforceable, and auditable.
•
Metrics are predominantly outcome-based, focused on end results rather than operational activity or effort.
|
||||
Guaranteed cash compensation should be limited, with the primary portion of executive officers’ compensation based on the achievement of objective performance metrics.
|
•
Compensation structure emphasizes at-risk, performance-based variable pay, making up an average of 76% of NEO target compensation in 2024.
•
Long-term incentive awards are aligned with shareholders and are performance-based through share price exposure and the application of performance metrics (PSUs).
|
||||
The compensation structure must not include any guaranteed monetary incentives.
|
•
Short- and long-term incentives are at risk through the application of performance measures and/or share price exposure.
•
The only guaranteed cash payment is base salary.
|
||||
The compensation should include a significant long-term element based on the electrical corporation’s long-term performance and value, held or deferred for at least three years.
|
•
Long-term incentive awards represent a significant portion of total compensation.
•
Performance-based equity is subject to a three-year performance period.
|
||||
Ancillary compensation that is not aligned with shareholder and taxpayer interests in the electrical corporation should be minimal or eliminated.
|
•
Since January 1, 2022, executive officers are not eligible to receive stipends in lieu of perquisites.
|
2024 Performance Metric
|
Short-Term | Long-Term | Why This Matters | ||||||||
Safety
|
|||||||||||
Weather-normalized CPUC-reportable fire ignitions rate
|
l
|
Public safety measure of the results of work to mitigate wildfire risk and reduce the overall number of wildfires in high fire threat districts and high fire risk areas.
|
|||||||||
Quality pass rate |
l
|
Public safety index measure of the quality of completion of electric system inspections and vegetation management. | |||||||||
Gas dig-in rate
|
l
|
Public safety measure of the results of work to mitigate the risk of loss of containment from underground gas transmission and distribution facilities. | |||||||||
Preventable motor vehicle incident rate
|
l
|
Coworker safety measure of safe driving effectiveness.
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|||||||||
Diablo Canyon Power Plant (DCPP) reliability and safety indicator |
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Public safety measure of the results of work to reduce the risk of a nuclear core damaging event with the potential for radiological release; composite metric of 10 performance indicators developed by the nuclear industry. | |||||||||
Safe dam operating capacity |
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Public safety measure of the results of work to mitigate the risk of large uncontrolled water release. | |||||||||
Serious injury actual count
|
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Workplace measure of safety effectiveness, covering coworkers, contractors and our community.
|
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System hardening effectiveness |
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Public safety and reliability measure assessing actions taken to mitigate the risk of catastrophic wildfires. | |||||||||
Electric corrective maintenance in high fire risk areas (HFRA)
|
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Public safety and reliability measure assessing actions taken to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfires.
|
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Customer experience
|
|||||||||||
Customers experiencing multiple planned and unplanned interruptions (CEMI-5 and CEMI-10) index
|
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Customer experience measure which promotes system reliability.
|
|||||||||
System average interruption duration index (SAIDI)
|
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Customer experience measure which promotes system reliability.
|
Supporting Information:
What “Financial Performance” Means for Us
|
||||||||
Our business model generates revenue through making investments in operating assets and earning an authorized rate of return on those assets through regulated rates, or “cost of service ratemaking.” There is no guarantee that regulated rates will yield the authorized rate of return; only by managing costs within the framework of authorized rates can we deliver value to shareholders. With limited exceptions, we do not make more money by selling more electricity and gas. Reducing our operating cost, which is tied to customer affordability through our rate-setting process, is directly aligned with creating shareholder value.
|
||||||||
2024 Performance Metric
|
Short-Term | Long-Term |
Why This Matters
|
||||||||
Financial
|
|||||||||||
Non-GAAP core earnings per share |
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Measure to promote and assess financial stability; aligns with cost efficiency; promotes customer affordability and financial stability critical to continued provision of services to customers.
|
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Operating cash flow |
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Measure to drive smart investments in wildfire risk reduction for the benefit of customers; promotes responsible cash management.
|
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Relative total shareholder return (TSR)
|
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Measure to assess relative value created for our shareholders, provides an indirect external assessment of our performance in all other areas.
|
Management |
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People and Compensation Committee |
![]() |
Boards | ||||||||||
Present proposals to the Committee on aspects of compensation and incentive plan design.
|
Oversee the companies’ compensation programs and makes recommendations to the Boards.
|
Review and approve the People and Compensation Committee’s recommendations related to PG&E Corporation CEO and Utility President (or equivalent officer) pay, and other matters brought to the Boards.
|
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Independent Consultants and Advisors | ||||||||||||||
Provide independent advice to the Committee, including the provision of market data, guidance on incentive plan design and legal/regulatory updates.
|
Shareholder and Stakeholder Meetings
Provides an opportunity to speak directly to our shareholder and other relevant stakeholders (such as regulators and proxy advisors) on compensation, as well as broader topics such as ESG and our long-term strategy.
|
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Say-On-Pay Vote Results
Provides opportunities for shareholder to vote on an advisory basis on our compensation arrangements, typically on an annual basis.
|
||||||||||||
Review of Feedback
The Committee actively considers feedback from shareholders, regulators, and other relevant stakeholder groups as part of its broader review of executive compensation arrangements.
|
Annual Risk Assessment |
Safety and Nuclear Oversight
Committees’ Input |
Compensation Risk Mitigation
Policies and Practices |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
Annual risk assessment conducted by Meridian covered:
•
Compensation philosophy and process, including the role of the Safety and Nuclear Oversight Committee
•
Compensation structure and mix
•
Incentive plan structures and associated time horizons
•
Other pay plans
•
Governance of plan design and administration oversight
•
Target and maximum opportunities
•
Nature and mix of performance metrics
•
People and Compensation Committee/Board discretion to reduce or eliminate performance
•
Change in control severance provisions
•
Use of risk-mitigation policies and practices (see final column)
•
Regulatory compliance
|
•
Advice regarding appropriate safety and operational incentive measures
•
Assessment of emphasis on and overlap/consistency in safety metrics and weightings, and the extent to which these metrics and weightings support an organization-wide focus on safety
|
•
Range of complementary incentive metrics and time horizons
•
Payout caps at market-typical levels
•
Responsible use of equity
•
Executive stock ownership guidelines
•
Clawback policies (a Dodd-Frank Act compliant policy and a broader recoupment policy)
•
Insider Trading Standard, including hedging and pledging provisions
•
Severance and change-in-control benefits
•
Incentive goal-setting approach
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
For 2024, Meridian concluded that the companies’ compensation arrangements do not encourage excessive risk taking (which also applies to PG&E’s CEO and the PEO of the Utility). The Committee believes the compensation programs and policies are not reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on either PG&E Corporation or the Utility.
|
Roles |
Ownership Targets
(% of Base Salary) |
|||||||
CEO, PG&E Corporation | 600 | % | ||||||
Executive Vice Presidents | 300 | % | ||||||
Senior Vice Presidents | 200 | % | ||||||
Vice Presidents | 100 | % |
Element | Dodd-Frank Clawback Policy |
Executive Incentive Compensation Recoupment Policy
|
2012 Officer Severance Policy
|
||||||||
Covered individuals | Current and former Section 16 Officers | Current and former Section 16 Officers | Executive Officers | ||||||||
Covered compensation |
Incentive compensation that is granted, earned, or vested based wholly or in part upon a financial reporting measure, which includes stock price and total shareholder return.
|
All performance-based and time-vesting compensation
|
Severance benefits | ||||||||
Triggers |
Restatements due to material noncompliance with applicable requirements, including restatements that correct immaterial errors that would result in material noncompliance if left uncorrected, commonly referred to “Big R” and “little R” restatements.
|
• Financial restatement with the SEC for any of the three most recently completed fiscal years
• A material miscalculation with respect to the amount of any payment
• Individual involvement in fraud or misconduct that causes material financial or reputational harm
|
Individual misconduct that materially contributes to PG&E Corporation or Utility felony conviction relating to public health or safety or company financial misconduct |
Pay
Comparator Group |
• |
Provides insights into compensation levels and design within companies that PG&E Corporation and the Utility compete with for talent and that are similar in terms of size and business operations.
|
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• |
Comprises publicly traded utility companies.
|
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• |
Supplemented by pay practice data from surveys for the broader energy services sector and general industry companies based on survey data.
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|
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Performance
Comparator Group |
• |
Provides comparative benchmark for PG&E Corporation’s total shareholder return performance, and other relative industry-standard benchmarks that might be considered in goal setting.
|
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• |
Comprises publicly traded electric and/or gas utility companies that are categorized consistently by the investment community as “regulated” and have a market capitalization of at least $6 billion.
|
Company | Pay | Performance | ||||||
AES (NYSE: AES)
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Alliant Energy (NASDAQ: LNT)
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Ameren (NYSE: AEE)
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American Electric Power (NASDAQ: AEP)
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CenterPoint Energy (NYSE: CNP)
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CMS Energy (NYSE: CMS)
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Consolidated Edison (NYSE: ED)
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Constellation Energy (NASDAQ: CEG)
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Dominion Energy (NYSE: D)
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DTE Energy (NYSE: DTE)
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Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK)
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Edison International (NYSE: EIX)
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Entergy (NYSE: ETR)
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Evergy (NASDAQ: EVRG)
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Eversource Energy (NYSE: ES)
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Exelon (NASDAQ: EXC)
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FirstEnergy (NYSE: FE)
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NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE)
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NiSource (NYSE: NI)
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Pinnacle West Capital (NYSE: PNW)
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PPL (NYSE: PPL)
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Public Service Enterprise (NYSE: PEG)
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Sempra Energy (NYSE: SRE)
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The Southern Company (NYSE: SO)
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WEC Energy (NYSE: WEC)
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Xcel Energy (NASDAQ: XEL)
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NEO | 2024 Salary |
(1)
|
Increase |
(2)
|
||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | $1,400,000 | — | % | |||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman | $773,890 | 3.50 | % | |||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos | $941,855 | 3.75 | % | |||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | $941,856 | 3.75 | % | |||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke | $750,375 | 3.50 | % | |||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams | $389,063 | 3.75 | % | |||||||||||
John R. Simon | $883,504 | 3.75 | % | |||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
(3)
|
$715,000 | __% | ||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
(4)
|
$725,550 | __% |
(1)
|
Annualized salary as of December 31, 2024.
|
||||
(2) |
Unless otherwise noted, salaries were effective March 1, 2024, with increases reflecting change relative to salary on December 31, 2023.
|
||||
(3) |
Mr. Awada became Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company effective January 16, 2024, with salary in effect from this date.
|
||||
(4) |
Mr. Waghray became Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of Pacific Gas and Electric Company effective January 1, 2024. He was previously Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of PG&E Corporation on July 1, 2023.
|
Financial Stability (30%)
•
Non-GAAP core earnings per share
•
Operating cash flow
Customer Experience (10%)
•
Customer experiencing multiple planned and unplanned interruptions (CEMI-5 + CEMI-10) index
|
![]() |
Safety (60%)
•
Weather-normalized CPUC-reportable fire ignitions rate
•
Quality pass rate
•
Gas dig-in rate
•
Preventable motor vehicle incident rate
•
DCPP reliability and safety indicator
•
Safe dam operating capacity
•
Serious injury actual count
|
Metric |
Definition
(1)
|
||||
Weather-normalized CPUC-reportable fire ignitions rate
|
The rate of Distribution and Transmission ignition incidents occurring in high-risk weather conditions normalized by 100,000 circuit miles over a rolling 365-day period. The number of fire incidents is calculated using the following criteria: (i) occur within PG&E’s HFTD and HFRA; (ii) occur in high-risk weather conditions defined as meeting the criteria of Fire Potential Index (FPI) or R3, R4, R5 and R5+; and (iii) is reportable to the CPUC per Decision 14-02-015. A reportable fire incident includes all the following: (1) Ignition is associated with PG&E electric assets, (2) something other than PG&E facilities burned, and (3) the resulting fire travelled more than one meter from the ignition point.
In the event of either of the following, this metric is scored at zero:
(1) Ignitions that result in fires that cause a third-party, coworker or a contract partner fatality.
(2) Ignitions that result in fires that damage or destroy > 500 structures.
|
||||
Quality pass rate |
Equally weighted index that tracks the quality of two core wildfire mitigation programs as measured by:
(1) Percentage of System Inspection Transmission inspections that pass the Quality Assurance review.
(2) Percentage of Vegetation Management Distribution trees that pass the Quality Assurance review.
|
||||
Gas dig in-rate
|
The number of gas dig-ins per 1,000 Underground Service Alert (USA) tickets received, excluding Pole Test and Treat tickets. The dig-in component tracks all gas dig-ins to PG&E gas subsurface installations. A dig-in refers to damage which occurs during excavation activities (impact or exposure) and results in a repair or replacement of an underground gas facility.
|
||||
Preventable motor vehicle incident rate
|
A Preventable Motor Vehicle Incident (PMVI) is any incident where the PG&E driver could have but failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the incident. This measure includes company-owned, rental and personal vehicles driven for company business and is calculated as the ratio of all PMVIs*1 Million to total company miles driven.
|
||||
DCPP reliability and safety indicator | The year-end combined (average) score for Unit 1 and Unit 2, representing a composite of 10 performance indicators for nuclear power generation developed by the nuclear industry and applied to all U.S. nuclear power plants. Indicator performance periods range from 18 to 36 months (rolling). | ||||
Safe dam operating capacity | Measure of operating capability of mechanical equipment used as main control to reduce the enterprise risk of any Large Uncontrolled Water Release (LUWR). Performance is based on the ratio of all controlled outlet days forced out over the controlled outlet days available. | ||||
Serious injury actual count
|
A work-related incident from work at or for PG&E, including motor vehicle incidents, that results in any of the following to coworkers, contractors, or directly supervised contractors:
(1) A life-threatening injury or illness that required immediate life-preserving action that if not applied immediately would likely have resulted in the death of that person.
(2) A life-altering injury or illness that resulted in a permanent and significant loss of a major body part or organ function.
The count includes the number of injuries meeting the metric definition.
In the event of either of the following, this metric is scored at zero:
(1) A coworker or contractor fatality, other than those associated with an ignition from our equipment.
(2) A public fatality due to an asset failure (when an authorized party determines the incident resulted directly from (a) incorrect operation of equipment, (b) failure or malfunction of utility-owned equipment, or (c) failure to comply with any Commission rule or standard.
|
||||
Customers experiencing multiple planned and unplanned interruptions (CEMI-5 and CEMI-10) index
|
The total number of customers experiencing 5 or more (CEMI-5), or 10 or more (CEMI-10) sustained interruptions (planned/unplanned). Metrics are reported as a year to date measure for a rolling 12-month period, and for incentive purposes is calculated as a composite index with CEMI-5 HFRA weighted at 35%, CEMI-5 non-HFRA weighted at 25%, CEMI-10 HFRA weighted at 25% and CEMI-10 non-HFRA weighted at 15%. All are calculated as a customer count.
|
Metric |
Definition
(1)
|
||||
Non-GAAP core earnings per share |
Financial performance from ongoing core operations, in dollars per share. The measurement is Non-GAAP core earnings. Non-GAAP core earnings excludes non-core items (expenses that Management does not consider representative of ongoing earnings and affects comparability of financial results between periods).
|
||||
Operating cash flow |
Operating cash flow measures cash the company’s normal operations generates. The definition aligns with the consolidated GAAP financial statements and is calculated by starting with Billed Revenue (cash income) and subtracting cash spend from operating activities (e.g., Cost of Energy, Functional Area Earnings Impacting Expense, and Functional Area Non-Earnings Impacting Expense).
|
(1) | These are abbreviated summary definitions and may not reflect complete details, including certain exclusions, for each metric. |
Performance Metrics | Weight |
Threshold
(50%) |
Target
(100%) |
Maximum
(200%) |
Actual |
Unweighted
Score |
Weighted
Score |
||||||||||||||||
Safety | 60% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Weather-normalized CPUC-reportable fire ignitions rate | 25% | 0.95 | 0.90 | 0.85 | 1.41 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Quality pass rate | 10% | 0.50 | 1.00 | 2.00 | 2.00 | 2.000 | 0.200 | ||||||||||||||||
Gas dig-in rate | 5% | 1.22 | 1.17 | 1.10 | 1.00 | 2.000 | 0.100 | ||||||||||||||||
Preventable motor vehicle incident rate | 5% | 2.34 | 2.25 | 2.21 | 2.38 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||||||
DCPP reliability and safety indicator | 5% | 95.0 | 97.5 | 100.0 | 100.0 | 2.000 | 0.100 | ||||||||||||||||
Safe dam operating capacity | 5% | 97.0% | 97.5% | 97.9% | 98.0% | 2.000 | 0.100 | ||||||||||||||||
Serious injury actual count | 5% | 2 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||||||
Customer Experience | 10% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
CEMI-5 and CEMI-10 index
(1)
|
10% | 0.500 | 1.000 | 2.000 | 0.500 | 0.500 | 0.500 | ||||||||||||||||
Financial Stability | 30% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Non-GAAP core earnings per share | 20% | $1.31 | $1.33 | $1.35 | $1.36 | 2.000 | 0.400 | ||||||||||||||||
Operating cash flow | 10% | $7,124 | $8,382 | $9,639 | $8,035 | 0.862 | 0.086 | ||||||||||||||||
2024 Final Short-Term Incentive Plan Company Score Following Compensation Committee Discretion
|
1.036 |
NEO |
Target Incentive
(percent of
Base)
(1)
|
Target
Incentive
(2)
|
Company
Score |
Individual Performance Modifier
(3)
|
Actual
Incentive |
Actual
Incentive (percent of Target) |
||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | 145% | $2,030,000 | 1.036 | 100% | $2,103,080 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman | 75% | $577,146 | 1.036 | 100% | $597,924 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos | 90% | $842,564 | 1.036 | 100% | $872,896 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | 90% | $842,564 | 1.036 | 100% | $872,896 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke | 75% | $559,609 | 1.036 | 100% | $579,755 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams | 50% | $193,359 | 1.036 | 101% | $202,324 | 104.6% | ||||||||||||||
John R. Simon | 75% | $658,636 | 1.036 | 100% | $682,347 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
(4)
|
75% | $514,878 | 1.036 | 100% | $533,413 | 103.6% | ||||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray | 75% | $540,969 | 1.036 | 100% | $560,444 | 103.6% |
(1) |
Reflects the target STIP percentage effective December 31, 2024.
|
||||
(2)
|
Reflects the actual target STIP value in effect for 2024, taking into account salary adjustments, target STIP percentage adjustments and length of service in 2024.
|
||||
(3)
|
The 2024 STIP base award for each NEO was subject to upward or downward adjustment for individual performance on key performance variables. The Individual Performance Modifier can range from zero to 120% of the base award, with a potential maximum total award at 200% of each NEO’s target opportunity. Ms. Williams received an individual performance modifier slightly above target in recognition of achievements during the year relative to her goals.
|
||||
(4)
|
Mr. Awada became Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company effective January 16, 2024. His dollar target incentive opportunity for the year is determined using the his eligible earnings which reflect for his service in 2024.
|
NEO |
2024 Target Long-Term Incentive
(1)
|
PSUs | ||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | $11,500,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Jason M. Glickman | $1,750,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Marlene M. Santos | $3,100,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Sumeet Singh | $2,600,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Carolyn J. Burke | $1,800,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Stephanie N. Williams | $425,000 | 100 | % | |||||
John R. Simon
(2)
|
$1,750,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Kaled H. Awada
(3)
|
$1,750,000 | 100 | % | |||||
Ajay Waghray | $1,500,000 | 100 | % |
(1)
|
The People and Compensation Committee approves target long-term incentive award values, that are converted into a number of PSUs based o
n the closing price of $16.60 on March 1, 2024.
Approved target values differ from the grant date fair values reported in the Summary Compensation Table which are determined in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification (FASB ASC) Topic 718.
|
||||
(2)
|
To recognize his leadership, performance, contributions and strengthen overall shareholder alignment and retention, Mr. Simon received a special award of Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) valued at $1,500,000. This was separate from his annual LTIP award and is not reflected in the 2024 Target Long-Term Incentive value figure reported above. See Additional Awards to Current Executives for additional details.
|
||||
(3)
|
In connection with his inducement to join the Company as Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company, effective January 16, 2024, Mr. Awada also received an award of RSUs valued at $1,000,000. This was separate from his annual LTIP award and is not reflected in the 2024 Target Long-Term Incentive value figure reported above. See New Hire Awards to New Executives for additional details.
|
Performance Metric | Weight |
Threshold
(50%)
|
Target
(100%)
|
Maximum
(200%)
|
||||||||||
Safety
|
40% | |||||||||||||
System hardening effectiveness | 20% | 95.0% | 97.0% | 98.5% | ||||||||||
Electric corrective maintenance in high fire risk areas (HFRA)
|
20% |
N/A
|
83.0%
|
88.0%
|
||||||||||
Customer Experience | 25% | |||||||||||||
System average interruption duration index (SAIDI)
(1)
|
25% | 289.70 | 275.90 | 262.10 | ||||||||||
Financial Stability | 35% | |||||||||||||
Relative total shareholder return (TSR)
(2)
|
35% |
25
th
Percentile
|
50
th
Percentile
|
90
th
Percentile
|
(1) |
Major Event Days are not included in the SAIDI calculation (and accordingly reflected in the goals) so as not to skew the measure of sustained outages (SAIDI) solely due to extreme weather.
|
||||
(2)
|
Comparator companies comprised those listed in our 2024 Performance Comparator Group: Alliant Energy Corporation, Ameren Corporation, American Electric Power Company, Inc., CMS Energy Corporation, Consolidated Edison, Inc., DTE Energy Company, Duke Energy Corporation, Edison International, Inc., Evergy, Inc., Eversource Energy, Exelon Corporation, FirstEnergy Corporation, NiSource Inc., Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, PPL Corp., The Southern Company, WEC Energy Group, Inc., and Xcel Energy Inc. See “Use of Market Data” section on page 57 for details on peer group selection.
|
Performance Metric | Weight |
Threshold
(50%) |
Target
(100%) |
Maximum
(200%) |
Actual | Unweighted Score | Weighted Score | ||||||||||||||||
Customer Experience | 30% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Customer satisfaction score | 15% | 73.0 | 76.0 | 78.5 | 66.7 | 0.000 | 0.000 | ||||||||||||||||
System average interruption duration index (SAIDI)
|
15% | 341.3 | 334.6 | 327.9 | 276.7 | 2.000 | 0.300 | ||||||||||||||||
Safety
|
40% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
System hardening effectiveness (risk miles)
(1)
|
20% | 1,226 | 1,360 | 1,411 | 1,272 | 0.672 | 0.134 | ||||||||||||||||
Enhanced vegetation management effectiveness (risk miles)
(1)
|
20% |
n/a
|
1,924 |
n/a
|
1,924 | 1.000 | 0.200 | ||||||||||||||||
Financial Stability | 30% | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Greater affordability for customers (millions)
(1)(2)
|
15% |
$(150)
|
$(104)
|
$(59) |
$(75)
|
1.644 | 0.247 | ||||||||||||||||
Relative total shareholder return (TSR)
(3)
|
15% | 25th Percentile | 50th Percentile | 90th Percentile |
100th Percentile
|
2.000 | 0.300 | ||||||||||||||||
2022 Overall PSU Performance Score
|
1.181
|
(1)
|
As discussed in the 2023 Proxy, PG&E submitted an amended Wildfire Mitigation Plan in early 2023 to reduce the number of system hardening miles (relative to the previously approved Wildfire Mitigation Plan) and to conclude the Enhanced Vegetation Management Plan, effective January 1, 2023. These changes were the result of significant improvements in operational risk mitigation by the Company since 2019 and the corresponding revised funding approved by the CPUC in the 2023 General Rate Case. In particular, the enhanced vegetation management targets were reviewed in recognition of the fact that the enhanced vegetation management program, although on track to exceed the 2022 target, was being phased out in favor of other wildfire risk-reduction initiatives. For this reason, the Committee certified the enhanced vegetation management target as achieved for 2022 but removed the metric from consideration for 2023 and 2024. Accordingly, the 2021 and 2022 PSU targets for system hardening, enhanced vegetation management and greater affordability for customers were adjusted and approved by the People and Compensation Committee in early 2023 (previously inadvertently disclosed as 2022) to ensure continued alignment with PG&E's regulatory commitments. Due to an administrative error in the 2023 Proxy, the targets for the 2022-2024 PSU metrics did not show the approved revisions. For the 2022 goals shown above, the original threshold, target and maximum for system hardening were 1,701, 1,790, and 1,956 risk miles, enhanced vegetation management was 5,400, 5,670, and 6,210 risk miles, and customer affordability was $(140), $(90), and $(40) million respectively.
|
||||
(2)
|
The targets are based on non-GAAP core earnings (aligned with our external EPS guidance) excluding unrecoverable interest expense, compared to authorized earnings as established through approved rate cases. | ||||
(3)
|
Comparator companies comprised those listed in our 2022 Performance Comparator Group in our 2023 Proxy Statement: Alliant Energy Corporation, Ameren Corporation, American Electric Power Company, Inc., CMS Energy Corporation, Consolidated Edison, Inc., Duke Energy Corporation, Edison International, Evergy, Inc., Eversource Energy, FirstEnergy Corp., NiSource Inc., Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, The Southern Company, WEC Energy Group, Inc., and Xcel Energy Inc. See “Use of Market Data” section on page 57 for details on peer group selection.
|
NEO |
Form of Compensation
|
Terms |
Value of Award
|
||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
|
Cash
|
• Cash payment
• Pro-rated amount subject to repayment if Mr. Awada voluntarily resigns prior to January 16, 2026.
|
$650,000 | ||||||||
RSUs
|
• RSUs with 50% vesting on the first anniversary of the date of grant (February 27, 2025) and 50% vesting on the second anniversary of the date of grant (i.e. February 27, 2026).
|
$1,000,000 |
Benefit | Eligible | Key Features | ||||||
PG&E Corporation Retirement Savings Plan | All NEOs |
•
Tax-qualified 401(k) plan
•
Maximum matching contribution of $0.75 for each dollar contributed, up to:
•
6% of base salary for individuals eligible for the final average pay pension benefit
•
8% of base salary for individuals eligible for a cash balance pension benefit
•
Matching funds above IRS limits contributed to the NEO’s account in the PG&E Corporation 2005 Supplemental Retirement Savings Plan, a non-qualified deferred compensation plan
|
||||||
Retirement Plan | All NEOs |
•
Tax-qualified defined benefit plan
•
Takes the form of either a final average pay pension benefit or a cash balance benefit
|
||||||
PG&E Corporation Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (SERP) | Simon |
•
Non-tax-qualified defined benefit pension plan
•
Frozen to new entrants after 2012
|
||||||
PG&E Corporation Defined Contribution Executive Supplemental Retirement Plan (DC-ESRP) |
Poppe, Glickman, Santos, Singh, Burke, Williams, Awada and Waghray
|
•
Non-tax-qualified defined contribution plan
•
Covers all officers elected on or after January 1, 2013
|
Termination Scenario
|
Eligible | Key Provisions | |||||||||
Termination without cause
|
All NEOs | • |
Cash severance of two-times (CEO) or one-times (other NEOs)
the sum of base salary and STIP target
|
||||||||
• | Pro-rata vesting of PSUs | ||||||||||
• | Continued vesting of unvested RSUs for one year | ||||||||||
• | Continued vesting of stock options for one year, with an exercise period equal to the lesser of one year or the remaining term of the options | ||||||||||
• | Limited COBRA benefits and outplacement services | ||||||||||
Termination for cause or resignation when not retirement eligible
|
All NEOs | Termination for cause or resignation when not retirement eligible: | |||||||||
• | Forfeits all unvested PSUs, RSUs, and stock options | ||||||||||
• | Forfeits any unpaid dividends associated with long-term incentive awards | ||||||||||
Termination following a Change in Control
|
All NEOs (except S. Williams) | • |
Cash severance of three-times (CEO) or two-times (other NEOs) the sum of base salary and STIP target
|
||||||||
• | LTIP award agreements detail treatment that accelerate vesting of all awards on a change of control (CIC) if either (1) the officer is severed in connection with the CIC, or (2) the award is not continued, assumed, or substituted |
Compensation Committee Report
|
||||||||
The People and Compensation Committee of the PG&E Corporation Board of Directors has reviewed and discussed this Compensation Discussion and Analysis with management. Based on this review, the related discussions, and such other matters deemed relevant, the People and Compensation Committee has recommended to the Boards of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this Proxy Statement for the year ended December 31, 2024.
Mark E. Ferguson III (Chair)
Kerry W. Cooper
Jessica L. Denecour
Michael R. Niggli
|
||||||||
Earnings |
Earnings per Common
Share (Diluted)
|
||||||||||
(in millions, except per share amounts) |
2024
|
2024 | |||||||||
PG&E Corporation’s Earnings (Loss) on a GAAP basis | $ | 2,475 | $ | 1.15 | |||||||
Non-core items:(1) | |||||||||||
Amortization of Wildfire Fund contribution (2)
|
$ | 276 | $ | 0.13 | |||||||
Bankruptcy and legal costs (3)
|
$ | 35 | $ | 0.02 | |||||||
Fire Victim Trust tax benefit net of securitization (4)
|
$ | 24 | $ | 0.01 | |||||||
Investigation remedies (5)
|
$ | 55 | $ | 0.03 | |||||||
Prior period net regulatory impact (6)
|
$ | 28 | $ | 0.01 | |||||||
StanPac settlement (7)
|
$ | 84 | $ | 0.04 | |||||||
Strategic repositioning costs (7)
|
$ | — | |||||||||
Tax-related adjustments
|
$ | (143) | $ | (0.07) | |||||||
Wildfire-related costs, net of insurance (8)
|
$ | 89 | $ | 0.04 | |||||||
PG&E Corporation’s Non-GAAP Core Earnings
|
$ | 2,923 | $ | 1.36 |
(in millions) |
Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2024
|
|||||||
Wildfires OII disallowance and system enhancements | $ | 9 | ||||||
Locate and mark OII system enhancements | 3 | |||||||
Paradise restoration and rebuild | 1 | |||||||
2020 Zogg fire settlement | 46 | |||||||
Investigation remedies
|
$ | 59 | ||||||
Tax impacts | (4) | |||||||
Investigation remedies (post-tax) | $ | 55 |
(in millions) |
Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2024
|
|||||||
2011 GT&S rate case
|
$ | (32) | ||||||
2021 WMCE decision
|
151 | |||||||
TO21 settlement in principle
|
(80) | |||||||
Prior period net regulatory impact
|
$ | 39 | ||||||
Tax impacts | (11) | |||||||
Prior period net regulatory impact (post-tax)
|
$ | 28 |
(in millions) |
Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2024
|
|||||||
San Bruno tax-related
|
70 | |||||||
Gas revenue procedure
|
(213) | |||||||
Tax-related adjustments
|
$ | (143) |
(in millions) |
Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2024
|
|||||||
2019 Kincade third-party claims | $ | 100 | ||||||
2019 Kincade fire-related costs | $ | 7 | ||||||
2020 Zogg fire-related insurance recoveries | $ | 1 | ||||||
2020 Zogg fire-related third party claims
|
$ | (3) | ||||||
2021 Dixie fire-related legal settlements |
17
|
|||||||
Wildfire-related costs, net of recoveries
|
$ | 123 | ||||||
Tax impacts | (34) | |||||||
Wildfire-related costs, net of recoveries
|
$ | 89 |
Name and
Principal Position |
Year |
Salary ($)
(1)
|
Bonus ($)
(2
)
|
Stock Awards ($)
(3)
|
Option Awards ($)
(4)
|
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation ($)
(5)
|
Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings ($)
(6)
|
All Other Compensation ($)
(7)
|
Total ($)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe
(8)
CEO, PG&E Corporation |
2024 | 1,400,000 | 0 | 11,723,088 | 0 | 2,103,080 | 31,770 | 566,001 | 15,823,939 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 1,400,000 | 0 | 11,750,292 | 0 | 3,453,030 | 33,718 | 357,799 | 16,994,840 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 1,391,667 | 0 | 10,069,628 | 0 | 2,207,520 | 13,269 | 437,777 | 14,119,861 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman
EVP, Engineering, Planning and Strategy, Pacific Gas and Electric Company |
2024 | 769,529 | 0 | 1,783,968 | 0 | 597,924 | 20,385 | 137,708 | 3,309,513 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 743,100 | 0 | 1,912,843 | 0 | 947,689 | 24,557 | 120,340 | 3,748,529 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 712,500 | 0 | 1,854,956 | 0 | 630,392 | 8,826 | 112,784 | 3,319,458 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos
EVP and Chief Customer Officer and Enterprise Solutions Officer, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
2024 | 936,182 | 0 | 3,160,150 | 0 | 872,896 | 24,941 | 235,786 | 5,229,955 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 902,344 | 0 | 2,841,929 | 0 | 1,408,549 | 43,618 | 200,978 | 5,397,418 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 866,667 | 0 | 2,755,918 | 0 | 993,034 | 16,727 | 155,677 | 4,788,022 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh
EVP, Operations and Chief Operating Officer, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
2024
|
936,182 | 0 | 2,650,459 | 0 | 872,896 | 31,896 | 199,747 | 4,691,181 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 869,011 | 0 | 2,841,929 | 0 | 1,314,236 | 173,050 | 141,795 | 5,340,021 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 675,000 | 0 | 1,854,956 | 0 | 597,213 | 3,251 | 96,811 | 3,227,232 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke
EVP and CFO, PG&E Corporation
|
2024
|
746,146 | 0 | 1,834,920 | 579,755 | 25,797 | 148,914 | 3,335,532 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 580,525 | 400,000 | 2,332,176 | 740,355 | 22,816 | 319,628 | 4,395,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
VP and Controller, PG&E Corporation and VP, CFO and Controller, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
2024
|
386,719 | 0 | 433,254 | 0 | 202,324 | 12,656 | 61,694 | 1,096,646 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 379,765 | 0 | 491,878 | 0 | 317,444 | 97,380 | 46,054 | 1,332,521 | |||||||||||||||||||||
John R. Simon
EVP, General Counsel, and Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer, PG&E Corporation
|
2024
|
878,182 | 0 | 3,283,977 | 0 | 682,347 | 1,185,466 | 48,823 | 6,078,795 | ||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | 846,308 | 0 | 1,912,843 | 0 | 1,100,899 | 1,096,294 | 38,164 | 4,994,509 | |||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | 812,248 | 0 | 1,854,956 | 0 | 725,760 | 11,337 | 36,605 | 3,440,906 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
(9)
EVP and Chief People Officer, PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
2024
|
686,504 | 650,000 | 2,783,980 | 0 | 533,413 | 21,540 | 226,136 | 4,901,573 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
(10)
EVP and Chief Information Officer, PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
2024
|
724,082 | 0 | 1,529,106 | 0 | 560,444 | 32,508 | 149,267 | 2,995,407 | ||||||||||||||||||||
(1)
|
Salary amounts reflect actual base salary earned during the fiscal year. Amounts may differ from the annual base salary rates due to mid-year salary adjustments.
|
||||
(2)
|
Mr. Awada received a cash sign-on award upon hire as previously described in the CD&A.
|
||||
(3)
|
Represents the grant date fair value of PSUs and RSUs measured in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, without considering an estimate of forfeitures related to service-based vesting. For PSUs using safety and affordability measures, and for RSUs, grant date fair value is measured using the closing price of PG&E Corporation common stock on the grant date. Assumptions made in valuation of reported performance shares with a relative TSR measure are described in footnote 4 to the table entitled “Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2024” on page 79. If the highest level of performance conditions were achieved, the estimated maximum grant date value of PSUs granted in 2024 would be: Ms. Poppe $23,446,175, Mr. Glickman $3,567,936, Ms. Santos $6,320,300, Mr. Singh $5,300,918, Ms. Burke $3,669,840, Ms. Williams $866,508, Mr. Simon $3,567,936, Mr. Awada $3,567,936, and Mr. Waghray $3,058,212. A portion of Mr. Awada’s stock award was granted at hire as described in the CD&A.
|
||||
(4)
|
No stock options were granted in 2024.
|
||||
(5)
|
Amounts represent payments received or deferred in 2025, 2024, and 2023 for achievement of corporate and organizational objectives in 2024, 2023, and 2022, respectively, under the STIP.
|
(6)
|
Amounts reported for 2024 consist of (i) the change in pension value during 2024 for all NEOs (Ms. Poppe $31,770, Mr. Glickman $20,385, Ms. Santos $24,941, Mr. Singh $26,021, Ms. Burke $25,797, Ms. Williams $12,656, Mr. Simon $1,183,166, Mr. Awada $21,540, and Mr. Waghray $32,508 and (ii) the above-market earnings on compensation deferred into the PG&E Corporation Supplemental Retirement Savings Plan and invested in the AA Utility Bond Fund for Mr. Simon ($2,300) and Mr. Singh ($5,875). The AA Utility Bond Fund accrues interest based on the long-term corporate bond yield average for AA utilities reported by Moody’s Investors Service. The above-market earnings are calculated as the difference between actual earnings from the AA Utility Bond Fund investment option and hypothetical earnings that would have resulted using an interest rate equal to 120 percent of the applicable federal rate.
|
||||
(7)
|
Amounts reported for 2024 consist of (i) perquisites and personal benefits (Ms. Poppe $146,733, Mr. Glickman $1,554, Ms. Santos $15,448, Mr. Singh $54, Ms. Burke $54, Ms. Williams $54, Mr. Simon $9,269, Mr. Awada $74,937, and Mr. Waghray $54), (ii) company contributions to defined contribution retirement plans (Ms. Poppe $419,232, Mr. Glickman $136,118, Ms. Santos $220,302, Mr. Singh $199,657, Ms. Burke $148,824, Ms. Williams $61,640, Mr. Simon $39,518, Mr. Awada $87,380, and Mr. Waghray $149,177), and (iii) tax restoration payments to reflect taxation on relocation benefits (Mr. Awada $63,818).
|
||||
(8)
|
On November 29, 2024, Ms. Poppe entered into an amended offer letter, extending the term of her offer letter for an additional five years, through January 4, 2031, effective January 4, 2026. The amended offer letter makes no changes to Ms. Poppe’s compensation, which will continue to be subject to an annual performance evaluation and market review, as well as approval at least annually by the independent members of the Board of Directors of PG&E Corporation.
|
||||
(9)
|
Mr. Awada was elected Executive Vice President, Chief People Officer of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company, effective January 16, 2024.
|
||||
(10)
|
Mr. Waghray was elected Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, effective January 1, 2024. He has served as Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of PG&E Corporation since July 1, 2023.
|
Fitness
($) |
Executive
Health ($) |
Relocation
Services ($) |
AD&D
($) |
Security
($)
|
Air Transportation ($)
|
|||||||||||||||
P. K. Poppe | 3,600 | 54 | 111,711 | 31,368 | ||||||||||||||||
J. M. Glickman | 1,500 | 54 | ||||||||||||||||||
M. M. Santos | 6,179 | 9,215 | 54 | |||||||||||||||||
S. Singh | 54 | |||||||||||||||||||
C.J. Burke
|
54 | |||||||||||||||||||
S. N. Williams
|
54 | |||||||||||||||||||
J. R. Simon | 9,215 | 54 | ||||||||||||||||||
K. H. Awada
|
74,883 | 54 | ||||||||||||||||||
A. Waghray
|
54 |
Committee / |
Estimated Future Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(1)
|
Estimated Future Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards
(2)
|
All Other
Stock Awards: Number of Shares of Stock |
Grant
Date Fair Value of Stock and Option |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Board Action | Threshold | Target | Maximum | Threshold | Target | Maximum | or Units | Awards | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name | Grant Date | Date | ($) | ($) | ($) | (#) | (#) | (#) |
(#)
(3)
|
($)
(4)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | 1,015,000 | 2,030,000 | 4,060,000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 225,151 | 450,302 | 900,604 | 0 | 7,475,013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 121,235 | 242,470 | 484,940 | 0 | 4,248,074 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman | 288,573 | 577,146 | 1,154,293 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 34,263 | 68,525 | 137,050 | 0 | 1,137,515 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 18,449 | 36,898 | 73,796 | 0 | 646,453 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos | 421,282 | 842,564 | 1,685,127 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 60,693 | 121,386 | 242,772 | 0 | 2,015,008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 32,681 | 65,362 | 130,724 | 0 | 1,145,142 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh
|
421,282 | 842,564 | 1,685,128 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 50,904 | 101,808 | 203,616 | 0 | 1,690,013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 27,410 | 54,820 | 109,640 | 0 | 960,446 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke
|
279,805 | 559,609 | 1,119,219 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 35,241 | 70,482 | 140,964 | 0 | 1,170,001 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 18,976 | 37,952 | 75,904 | 0 | 664,919 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
|
96,680 | 193,359 | 386,719 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 8,321 | 16,642 | 33,284 | 0 | 276,257 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 4,481 | 8,961 | 17,922 | 0 | 156,997 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John R. Simon | 329,318 | 658,636 | 1,317,272 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 90,362 | 1,500,009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 34,263 | 68,525 | 137,050 | 0 | 1,137,515 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 18,449 | 36,898 | 73,796 | 0 | 646,453 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
|
257,439 | 514,878 | 1,029,755 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2/27/2024 | 12/12/2023 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 60,278 | 1,000,012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 34,263 | 68,525 | 137,050 | 0 | 1,137,515 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 18,449 | 36,898 | 73,796 | 0 | 646,453 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
|
270,484 | 540,969 | 1,081,937 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 29,368 | 58,735 | 117,470 | 0 | 975,001 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | 2/12/2024 | 15,814 | 31,627 | 63,254 | 0 | 554,105 |
(1) |
Compensation opportunity granted for 2024 under the STIP. Actual amounts earned are reported in the Summary Compensation Table in the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” column. Threshold equals a 0.5 times target. Maximum equals 2.0 times target.
|
||||
(2) |
Represents PSUs granted in 2024 under the 2021 LTIP. Threshold equals 0.5 times target. Maximum equals 2.0 times target for PSUs.
|
(3) |
Represents RSUs granted in 2024 under the 2021 LTIP. For Mr. Simon and Mr. Awada, includes RSUs received as a one-time recognition award and new hire sign-on award in 2024 respectively.
|
||||
(4) |
For PSUs with operational measures, the number and fair value of awards are measured at the grant date using the PG&E Corporation stock price which was $16.60 on March 1, 2024. For PSUs with a relative TSR measure, the number of awards is calculated at the grant date using the PG&E stock price which was $16.60 on March 1, 2024, and the fair value of awards are measured at the grant date using a Monte Carlo simulation valuation model. The model assumes that performance conditions are probable of being achieved, applies a risk-free interest rate meant to equal the expected yield on a U.S. 3 Year Treasury Note, and uses historical common stock volatilities from the Company and from peer companies for the 36-month period preceding the grant date. The assumed per-share value on March 1, 2024, was $17.52.
|
Option Awards | Stock Awards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name |
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Exercisable
(1)
|
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options (#) Unexercisable
(2)
|
Option Exercise Price ($) |
Option
Expiration Date |
Number of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested (#)
(3)
|
Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested ($)
(4)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned Shares,
Units or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested (#)
(5)
|
Equity Incentive
Plan Awards: Market or Payout Value of Unearned Shares, Units
or Other Right
That Have Not Vested ($)
(4)
|
||||||||||||||||||
P. K. Poppe | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 950,044 | 19,171,888 | 1,381,436 | 37,634,449 | ||||||||||||||||||
J. M. Glickman | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 175,012 | 3,531,742 | 217,532 | 5,926,220 | ||||||||||||||||||
M. M. Santos | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 260,014 | 5,247,083 | 353,308 | 9,625,174 | ||||||||||||||||||
S. Singh | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 175,012 | 3,531,742 | 323,188 | 8,804,615 | ||||||||||||||||||
C. J. Burke
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12,377 | 249,768 | 219,823 | 5,988,637 | ||||||||||||||||||
S. N. Williams
|
2,738 | 0 | 41.26 | 3/1/2028 | 25,132 | 507,164 | 54,432 | 1,482,887 | ||||||||||||||||||
J. R. Simon | 43,989 | 0 | 41.26 | 3/1/2028 | 265,374 | 5,355,247 | 217,532 | 5,926,220 | ||||||||||||||||||
K. H. Awada
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 60,278 | 1,216,410 | 105,423 | 2,872,038 | ||||||||||||||||||
A. Waghray
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 85,007 | 1,715,441 | 154,426 | 4,207,026 |
(1)
|
Consists of unexercised stock options from awards granted in 2018. | ||||
(2)
|
As of December 31, 2024, no unvested stock options were outstanding.
|
||||
(3)
|
Consists of unvested RSUs and unvested PSUs granted in 2022 for which the performance period ended on December 31, 2024. Earned, but not vested PSUs are shown in the table below as Earned PSUs. See the CD&A for additional details regarding awards granted in 2024.
|
||||
(4)
|
Market value is based upon the $20.18 closing price of PG&E Corporation common stock on December 31, 2024.
|
(5)
|
Consists of unvested PSUs granted in 2023 and 2024. Consistent with SEC rules, the number of shares is presented assuming target performance for 2023 awards using operational measures and maximum performance for 2023 awards using measures based on TSR, and assuming target performance for 2024 awards using operational measures and maximum performance for 2024 awards using measures based on TSR. The numbers reported in this column reflect adjustments to the number of PSUs awarded for 2023 and 2024 to reflect changes in the Monte Carlo simulation values for relative TSR. See the CD&A and Grant of Plan-Based Awards table for additional details regarding awards granted in 2024.
|
||||
(6)
|
Disclosed below is the vesting schedule for each of the RSU awards described above. | ||||
(7)
|
Disclosed below is the vesting schedule for each of the earned, but not vested PSUs, and the unearned PSU awards described above. |
Name | Award Date | Award Type | Vesting Schedule | Units # | Total | ||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke
|
3/16/2023 | RSU | 3/16/2025 | 12,377 | 12,377 | ||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
|
3/1/2022 | RSU | 3/1/2025 | 4,130 | 4,130 | ||||||||||||
John R. Simon | 3/1/2024 | RSU | 3/1/2025 | 18,072 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | RSU | 3/1/2026 | 36,145 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | RSU | 3/1/2027 | 36,145 | 90,362 | |||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
|
2/27/2024 | RSU | 2/27/2025 | 30,139 | |||||||||||||
2/27/2024 | RSU | 2/27/2026 | 30,139 | 60,278 | |||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | 3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 950,044 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 688,664 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 692,772 | 2,331,480 | |||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman | 3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 175,012 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 112,109 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 105,423 | 392,544 | |||||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos | 3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 260,014 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 166,560 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 186,748 | 613,322 | |||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | 3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 175,012 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 166,560 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 156,628 | 498,200 | |||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke | 3/16/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/16/2026 | 111,389 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 108,434 | 219,823 | |||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
|
3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 21,002 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 28,829 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 25,603 | 75,434 | |||||||||||||
John R. Simon | 3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 175,012 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 112,109 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 105,423 | 392,544 | |||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
|
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 105,423 | 105,423 | ||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
|
3/1/2022 | Earned PSU | 3/1/2025 | 85,007 | |||||||||||||
3/1/2023 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2026 | 64,064 | ||||||||||||||
3/1/2024 | Unearned PSU | 3/1/2027 | 90,362 | 239,433 |
Option Awards
(2)
|
Stock Awards | |||||||||||||
Name |
Number of Shares Acquired on Exercise
(
#)
|
Value Realized on Exercise ($) |
Number of Shares Acquired on Vesting (#)
(1)
|
Value Realized on Vesting ($)
(1)
|
||||||||||
P. K. Poppe | 0 | 0 | 659,879 | 10,960,590 | ||||||||||
J. M. Glickman | 0 | 0 | 152,401 | 2,674,638 | ||||||||||
M. M. Santos | 0 | 0 | 213,949 | 3,478,811 | ||||||||||
S. Singh | 0 | 0 | 51,012 | 847,309 | ||||||||||
C. J. Burke
|
0 | 0 | 12,376 | 201,234 | ||||||||||
S. N. Williams
|
0 | 0 | 23,781 | 395,002 | ||||||||||
J. R. Simon | 0 | 0 | 124,843 | 2,073,642 | ||||||||||
K. H. Awada
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||||
A. Waghray
|
0 | 0 | 51,012 | 847,309 |
(1)
|
Reflects stock awards that vested on March 1, 2024, March 15, 2024 and March 16, 2024 which were $16.60, $16.25 and $16.25 respectively. Starting in May 2024, PG&E began valuing vested stock awards using the closing stock price on the day before the vesting date. Stock awards that vested on May 3, 2024, were valued based on the closing stock price on May 2, 2024 which was $17.53. It also includes the value of dividends upon vesting. Aggregate dollar amount realized upon vesting was computed by multiplying the number of shares of stock by the market value of the underlying shares on the applicable vesting date.
|
||||
(2)
|
None of the NEOs exercised stock options during 2024.
|
Name | Plan Name |
Number
of Years Credited Service (#) |
Present
Value of Accumulated Benefits ($) |
Payments
During Last Fiscal Year ($) |
||||||||||
P. K. Poppe | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 3.99 | 96,955 | 0 | ||||||||||
J. M. Glickman | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 3.66 | 67,141 | 0 | ||||||||||
M. M. Santos | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 3.80 | 107,578 | 0 | ||||||||||
S. Singh | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 22.64 | 845,745 | 0 | ||||||||||
C.J. Burke
|
Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 1.80 | 48,613 | 0 | ||||||||||
S. N. Williams
|
Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 14.36 | 415,653 | 0 | ||||||||||
J. R. Simon | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 17.71 | 3,274,520 | 0 | ||||||||||
J. R. Simon | PG&E Corporation Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 17.71 | 2,572,575 | 0 | ||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 0.96 | 21,540 | 0 | ||||||||||
Ajay Waghray | Pacific Gas and Electric Company Retirement Plan | 4.28 | 123,726 | 0 |
Name |
Plan
|
Executive Contributions in Last FY($)
(1)
|
Registrant Contributions in Last FY($)
(2)
|
Aggregate Earnings in Last FY ($)
(3)
|
Aggregate
Withdrawals/ Distribution ($) |
Aggregate Balance at Last FYE($)
(4)
|
||||||||||||||
P. K. Poppe | SRSP Plan | 504,000 | 70,560 | 60,380 | 0 | 857,937 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 339,712 | 116,533 | 0 | 1,061,259 | |||||||||||||||
J. M. Glickman | SRSP Plan | 0 | 9,552 | 4,096 | 0 | 47,636 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 120,205 | 32,722 | 0 | 370,511 | |||||||||||||||
M. M. Santos | SRSP Plan | 0 | 47,093 | 10,591 | 0 | 182,540 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 164,131 | 56,307 | 0 | 525,169 | |||||||||||||||
S. Singh | SRSP Plan | 0 | 28,325 | 6,913 | 0 | 93,758 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 157,529 | 32,044 | 0 | 680,082 | |||||||||||||||
C. J. Burke
|
SRSP Plan | 0 | 27,519 | 1,422 | 0 | 43,972 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 104,055 | 9,006 | 0 | 153,890 | |||||||||||||||
S. N. Williams | SRSP Plan | 0 | 1,530 | 211 | 0 | 3,536 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 49,291 | 20,111 | 0 | 215,330 | |||||||||||||||
J. R. Simon | SRSP Plan | 0 | 24,437 | 178,986 | 0 | 2,533,389 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||
K. H. Awada
|
SRSP Plan | 0 | 22,162 | 0 | 0 | 22,162 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 48,055 | 1,602 | 0 | 49,657 | |||||||||||||||
A. Waghray
|
SRSP Plan | 0 | 22,384 | 5,557 | 0 | 93,394 | ||||||||||||||
DC-ESRP | 0 | 105,900 | 23,546 | 0 | 346,944 |
(1)
|
Represents contributions made in 2024.
|
||||
(2)
|
The amounts shown were earned and reported for 2024 as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table.
|
||||
(3)
|
Represents earnings from the SRSP Plans and the DC-ESRP described below. Includes the following amounts that were reported for 2024 as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table: Mr. Simon $2,300 and Mr. Singh $5,875.
|
||||
(4)
|
Includes the following amounts that were reported as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table for 2024and prior years: Ms. Poppe (SRSP Plans) $287,017, Ms. Poppe (DC-ESRP) $887,911 Mr. Glickman (SRSP Plans) $41,202, Mr. Glickman (DC-ESRP) $317,830, Ms. Santos (SRSP Plans) $169,327, Ms. Santos (DC-ESRP) $438,764, Mr. Singh (SRSP Plans) $99,577, Mr. Singh (DC-ESRP) $326,547, Ms. Burke (SRSP Plans) $42,550, Ms. Burke (DC-ESRP) $142,118, Ms. Williams (SRSP Plans) $2,520, Ms. Williams (DC-ESRP) $86,877, Mr. Simon (SRSP Plans) $2,113,074, Mr. Awada (SRSP Plans) $22,162, Mr. Awada (DC-ESRP) $48,055, Mr. Waghray (SRSP Plans) $22,384 and Mr. Waghray (DC-ESRP) $105,900.
|
Fund Name |
2024 Return(%)
|
||||
Bond Index Fund | 1.36% | ||||
International Stock Index Fund | 4.67% | ||||
Large Company Stock Index Fund | 25.00% | ||||
Money Market Investment Fund | 5.30% | ||||
Retirement Income Fund | 6.93% | ||||
Small Company Stock Index Fund | 17.12% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2020 | 7.16% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2025 | 8.64% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2030 | 10.01% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2035 | 10.68% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2040 | 11.43% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2045 | 12.05% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2050 | 12.63% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2055 | 12.77% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2060 | 12.78% | ||||
Target Date Fund 2065 | 12.79% | ||||
U.S. Government Bond Index Fund | 2.51% |
Name | Resignation / Retirement ($) | Termination For Cause ($) |
Termination Without Cause ($)
|
Disability ($)
|
Death ($)
|
Change in Control ($) | ||||||||||||||
Patricia K. Poppe | ||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 97,581 | 97,581 | 97,581 | 97,581 | 97,581 | 97,581 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 30,574,420 | 44,550,252 | 44,550,252 | 44,550,252 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 6,860,000 | - | - | 10,290,000 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 2,103,080 | - | 2,103,080 | 2,103,080 | 2,103,080 | 2,030,000 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 41,584 | - | - | 41,584 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 2,200,661 | 97,581 | 39,696,165 | 46,750,913 | 46,750,913 | 57,028,917 | ||||||||||||||
Jason M. Glickman | ||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 67,141 | 67,141 | 67,141 | 67,141 | 80,684 | 67,141 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 5,283,503 | 7,459,006 | 7,459,006 | 7,459,006 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,354,308 | - | - | 2,708,616 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 597,924 | - | 597,924 | 597,924 | 597,924 | 580,418 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 57,427 | - | - | 57,427 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 665,065 | 67,141 | 7,379,802 | 8,124,070 | 8,137,613 | 10,892,107 | ||||||||||||||
Marlene M. Santos
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 107,578 | 107,578 | 107,578 | 107,578 | 107,578 | 107,578 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 8,051,062 | 11,691,321 | 11,691,321 | 11,691,321 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,789,525 | - | - | 3,579,051 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 872,896 | - | 872,896 | 872,896 | 872,896 | 847,670 |
Name | Resignation / Retirement ($) | Termination For Cause ($) |
Termination Without Cause ($)
|
Disability ($)
|
Death ($)
|
Change in Control ($) | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 41,584 | - | - | 41,584 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 980,474 | 107,578 | 10,882,145 | 12,671,794 | 12,671,794 | 16,286,703 | ||||||||||||||
Sumeet Singh | ||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 819,064 | 819,064 | 819,064 | 819,064 | 581,976 | 819,064 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 6,365,343 | 9,597,499 | 9,597,499 | 9,597,499 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,789,526 | - | - | 3,579,053 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 872,896 | - | 872,896 | 872,896 | 872,896 | 847,670 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 57,427 | - | - | 57,427 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 1,691,960 | 819,064 | 9,923,756 | 11,289,459 | 11,052,371 | 14,920,213 | ||||||||||||||
Carolyn J. Burke
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 48,290 | 48,290 | 48,290 | 48,290 | 48,290 | 48,290 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 2,488,303 | 4,699,805 | 4,699,805 | 4,699,805 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,313,156 | - | - | 2,626,313 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 579,755 | - | 579,755 | 579,755 | 579,755 | 562,781 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 19,801 | - | - | 19,801 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 628,045 | 48,290 | 4,468,806 | 5,327,850 | 5,327,850 | 7,976,490 | ||||||||||||||
Stephanie N. Williams
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 405,955 | 405,955 | 405,955 | 405,955 | 190,500 | 405,955 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 1,013,071 | 1,552,090 | 1,552,090 | 1,552,090 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 583,594 | - | - | 583,594 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 202,324 | - | 202,324 | 202,324 | 202,324 | 194,531 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 57,427 | - | - | 57,427 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 608,279 | 405,955 | 2,281,870 | 2,160,369 | 1,944,914 | 2,813,097 | ||||||||||||||
John R. Simon | ||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 6,081,646 | 6,081,646 | 6,081,646 | 6,081,646 | 3,332,855 | 6,081,646 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | 5,283,503 | - | 5,649,190 | 9,287,481 | 9,287,481 | 9,287,481 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,546,132 | - | - | 3,092,264 |
Name | Resignation / Retirement ($) | Termination For Cause ($) |
Termination Without Cause ($)
|
Disability ($)
|
Death ($)
|
Change in Control ($) | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 682,347 | - | 682,347 | 682,347 | 682,347 | 662,628 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 41,584 | - | - | 41,584 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Payment in Lieu of Post-Retirements Life Insurance | 323,076 | 323,076 | 323,076 | - | - | 323,076 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 12,370,572 | 6,404,722 | 14,343,474 | 16,051,474 | 13,302,683 | 19,508,178 | ||||||||||||||
Kaled H. Awada
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 21,540 | 21,540 | 21,540 | 21,540 | 24,150 | 21,540 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 1,314,700 | 3,352,960 | 3,352,960 | 3,352,960 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,251,250 | - | - | 2,502,500 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 533,413 | - | 533,413 | 533,413 | 533,413 | 536,250 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 57,427 | - | - | 57,427 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 554,953 | 21,540 | 3,197,830 | 3,907,913 | 3,910,523 | 6,490,177 | ||||||||||||||
Ajay Waghray
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Value of Accumulated Pension Benefits | 120,981 | 120,981 | 120,981 | 120,981 | 120,981 | 120,981 | ||||||||||||||
Value of Stock Awards Vesting | - | - | 2,958,633 | 4,609,895 | 4,609,895 | 4,609,895 | ||||||||||||||
Severance Payment | - | - | 1,269,713 | - | - | 2,539,425 | ||||||||||||||
Short-Term Incentive Plan Award | 560,444 | - | 560,444 | 560,444 | 560,444 | 544,163 | ||||||||||||||
Health Care Insurance | - | - | 41,584 | - | - | 41,584 | ||||||||||||||
Career Transition | - | - | 19,500 | - | - | 19,500 | ||||||||||||||
Total | 681,425 | 120,981 | 4,970,854 | 5,291,320 | 5,291,320 | 7,875,547 |
CIC Occurs and Acquiror Does
Not Assume, Continue, or Grant Substitute LTIP Awards |
Termination Within
Three Months Before CIC; Awards Are Assumed, Continued, or Substituted |
Termination Within
Two Years After CIC; Awards Are Assumed, Continued, or Substituted |
|||||||||
Performance
Shares |
Vest upon CIC, payable at end of the performance period, but based on a payout factor measuring TSR for PG&E for the period from the beginning of the performance period to the date of CIC, and assuming performance for other measures was at target
|
Vest upon CIC, payable at the end of the performance period
|
Vest upon termination, payable at the end of the performance period
|
||||||||
RSUs |
Vest upon CIC, settled under the normal schedule
|
Vest upon CIC, settled under the normal schedule (includes any RSUs that would have continued to vest after termination)
|
Vest upon termination, settled within 60 days
|
||||||||
Stock Options |
Vest upon CIC and will be cancelled in exchange for fair value
|
Vest upon CIC; may be exercised within shorter of remaining term or one year
|
Vest upon termination; may be exercised within shorter of remaining term or one year
|
Corporation PEOs/NEOs
(1)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year |
SCT Total
for PEO
#1 ($)
|
CAP
to PEO
#1 ($)
|
SCT Total for PEO
#2 ($)
|
CAP
to PEO
#2 ($)
|
SCT Total for PEO
#3 ($)
|
CAP
to PEO
#3 ($)
|
ASCT
Total for
Non-PEO
NEOs ($)
(2)
|
ACAP
to Non-PEO
NEOs ($)
(3)
|
Value of Initial Fixed $100 Investment Based On: |
Net
Income ($mm) |
Non-GAAP Core EPS ($)
(5)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TSR ($)
|
Peer Group TSR ($)
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (d) | (e) | (f) | (g) | (h) | (i) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2023 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021
(6)
|
|
|
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2020 | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
Utility PEOs/NEOs
(1)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Year |
SCT Total
for PEO #1 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #1 ($) |
SCT Total for PEO
#2 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #2 ($) |
SCT Total for PEO
#3 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #3 ($) |
SCT Total for PEO
#4 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #4 ($) |
SCT Total for PEO
#5 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #5 ($) |
SCT Total for PEO
#6 ($) |
CAP
to PEO #6 ($) |
ASCT Total for
Non-PEO
NEOs ($)
(2)
|
ACAP
to Non-PEO
NEOs ($)
(3)
|
Value of Initial Fixed $100 Investment Based On: |
Non-GAAP Core EPS ($)
(5)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TSR ($) |
Peer Group TSR ($)
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(a) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (b) | (c) | (d) | (e) | (f) | (g) | (h) | (i) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2023 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2022 | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2020 | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO | Not an NEO |
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
Legend | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1) SCT | – |
Summary Compensation Table
|
3) CAP | – |
Compensation Actually Paid
|
5) TSR | – |
Total Shareholder Return
|
||||||||||||||||||
2) ASCT | – |
Average Summary Compensation Table
|
4) ACAP | – |
Average Compensation Actually Paid
|
6) EPS | – | Earnings Per Share |
Year | Corporate PEOs | Utility PEOs | Corporate Non-PEO NEOs | Utility Non-PEO NEOs | ||||||||||
2024 |
|
|
Carolyn J. Burke |
Stephanie N. Williams
|
||||||||||
|
John R. Simon |
Kaled H. Awada
|
||||||||||||
|
Ajay Waghray
|
|||||||||||||
2023 |
|
|
Carolyn J. Burke
|
Stephanie N. Williams
|
||||||||||
|
John R. Simon | David S. Thomason | ||||||||||||
|
Christopher A. Foster
|
Julius Cox | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
|
Christopher A. Foster
|
David S. Thomason | ||||||||||
|
John R. Simon | Sumeet Singh | ||||||||||||
|
Julius Cox
|
|||||||||||||
2021 |
|
|
Christopher A. Foster
|
David S. Thomason | ||||||||||
|
|
John R. Simon | James M. Welsch | |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
2020 |
|
|
Christopher A. Foster
|
David S. Thomason | ||||||||||
|
|
John R. Simon | James M. Welsch | |||||||||||
Jason P. Wells | ||||||||||||||
Janet C. Loduca |
Deductions from SCT Total Pay | Additions to SCT Total Pay | ||||||||||||||||||||||
PEO | Year | SCT Total ($) | Amounts Reported in the Summary Compensation Table for Stock Awards ($) |
Amounts Reported in the Summary Compensation Table for Pension
Value ($)
|
Fair Value of Equity Awards Calculated in Accordance with Compensation Actually Paid Requirements ($)
(a)
|
Value of Service Cost and Prior Service Cost under the Pension
Plans ($)
|
CAP ($) | ||||||||||||||||
Poppe, P | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
2023 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Singh, S | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Glickman, J | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Santos, M | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Average for non-PEO Corporate NEOs | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Average for non-PEO Utility NEOs | 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
PEO | Year |
Addition of fair value at fiscal year (FY) end, of equity awards granted during the FY that remained outstanding ($)
|
Addition of change in fair value at FY end versus prior FY end for awards granted in prior FY that remained outstanding ($)
|
Addition of change in fair value at vesting date versus prior FY end for awards granted in prior FY that vested during FY ($)
|
Addition of fair value at vesting date, of equity awards granted during the FY that vested during
the FY ($)
|
Deduction of the fair value at the prior FY end for awards granted in prior FY that failed to meet their vesting conditions ($)
|
Average Value of Dividends or other Earnings Paid on Stock or Option Awards not Otherwise Reflected in Fair Value or Total Compensation |
Total Equity Adjustments Reflected in CAP ($)
|
||||||||||||||||||
Poppe, P | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
2023 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Singh, S | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Glickman, J | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Santos, M | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Average for non-PEO Corporate NEOs | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||
Average for non-PEO Utility NEOs | 2024 |
|
|
(
|
|
|
|
|
Tabular List of Most Important Measures | ||
|
||
|
||
|
Board Recommendation |
What are you voting on?
PG&E Corporation and the Utility each asks its respective shareholders to ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as that company’s independent auditor for the year ending December 31, 2025.
|
||||||||||
![]() |
Vote “FOR”
|
Report of the Audit Committees
|
||||||||||||||
The Audit Committees of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company are comprised of independent directors and operate under written charters adopted by their respective Boards. The members of the Audit Committees of PG&E Corporation and the Utility are identical. At both PG&E Corporation and the Utility, management is responsible for internal controls and the integrity of the financial reporting process.
The Audit Committees reviewed and discussed the audited consolidated financial statements of PG&E Corporation and the Utility with management and the independent auditor. The Audit Committees also discussed with the independent auditor the matters that are required to be discussed by applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) and the SEC.
Deloitte & Touche LLP was the independent auditor for PG&E Corporation and the Utility in 2024. Deloitte & Touche LLP provided to the Committees the written disclosures and letter required by applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding an independent auditor’s communications with an audit committee concerning independence and non-audit services, and the Audit Committees discussed with Deloitte & Touche LLP that firm’s independence.
Based on the Audit Committees’ review and discussions described above, the Audit Committees recommended to the respective Boards and their delegates that the audited consolidated financial statements for PG&E Corporation and the Utility be included in the PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the SEC.
Audit Committees of the Boards of Directors of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company
|
||||||||||||||
Benjamin F. Wilson (Chair)
Rajat Bahri
|
Edward G. Cannizzaro
Leo P. Denault
|
Arno L. Harris
Carlos M. Hernandez
|
Oversight |
Each Audit Committee is responsible for the appointment, replacement, compensation, and oversight of the work of the independent auditor. The Audit Committees review the scope of the audit, including the terms of the engagement. The independent auditor reports directly to the Audit Committees; at each Audit Committee meeting, the independent auditor meets separately with the Audit Committees, without management present.
|
|||||||
Evaluation
|
Annually, each Audit Committee also meets without the auditor present to evaluate the independence, qualifications, and performance of the independent auditor, taking into account the opinions of management and the internal auditors. To ensure continuing independence of the independent auditor, the Audit Committees also consider whether there should be rotation of the independent auditor. In accordance with SEC rules, the lead audit partner may provide a maximum number of five consecutive years of service to the companies. Consistent with that requirement, Deloitte & Touche assigned a new lead auditor to lead the integrated audit of PG&E Corporation’s and the Utility’s financial statements, starting in 2022. The Audit Committees reviewed and evaluated the new lead auditor as part of their annual process for reviewing the independent auditor.
|
|||||||
Selection
|
For 2025, the Audit Committees selected Deloitte & Touche as the companies’ independent auditor, following consideration of the following factors and criteria:
• The quality and efficiency of the services Deloitte & Touche provides, including its effectiveness at demonstrating independent judgment, objectivity, and professional skepticism;
• Deloitte & Touche’s judgments on critical accounting matters;
• The quality and candor of Deloitte & Touche’s communications with the Audit Committee and management;
• External data on Deloitte & Touche’s audit quality and performance, including recent PCAOB reports on Deloitte & Touche and its peer firms;
• Deloitte & Touche’s independence and its processes for maintaining its independence;
• Deloitte & Touche’s technical expertise and knowledge of the utility industry, including the size of Deloitte & Touche’s utility practice among the “Big Four” public accounting firms and the experience of the companies’ existing audit engagement team;
• Deloitte & Touche’s strong commitment to supporting supplier diversity;
• The appropriateness of Deloitte & Touche’s fees, including the avoided time and costs that would come with onboarding a new auditor; and
• Deloitte & Touche’s tenure as the companies’ independent registered accounting firm, including its significant institutional knowledge and deep expertise in the companies’ business, accounting policies and practices, and internal control over financial reporting.
The Audit Committees also considered Deloitte & Touche’s (1) quality control report, (2) discussion of its independence, and (3) proposed audit plan (including draft engagement letter) for 2025.
|
(in millions)
|
2024 ($)
|
2023 ($)
|
||||||
Audit Fees |
6.335
|
6.050
|
||||||
Audit-Related Fees |
0.520
|
0.740
|
||||||
Tax Fees |
0
|
0
|
||||||
All Other Fees |
0
|
0
|
(in millions)
|
2024 ($)
|
2023 ($)
|
||||||
Audit Fees |
5.305
|
5.180
|
||||||
Audit-Related Fees | 0.510 |
0.715
|
||||||
Tax Fees |
0
|
0
|
||||||
All Other Fees |
0
|
0
|
Category | Description | ||||
Audit services | Audit and review of annual and quarterly financial statements, expressing opinions on the conformity of the audited financial statements with generally accepted accounting principles, auditing management’s assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, and services that only the independent auditor reasonably can provide (e.g., comfort letters, statutory and regulatory audits, attest services, consents, assistance with and review of documents filed with the SEC, and assistance with new accounting standards, laws, and regulations). | ||||
Audit-related services | Assurance and related services that traditionally are performed by the independent auditor (e.g., agreed-upon procedure reports related to contractual obligations and financing activities, nuclear decommissioning trust audits, and attest services). | ||||
Tax services | Advice relating to compliance, tax strategy, tax appeals, and specialized tax issues, all of which also must be permitted under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. | ||||
Non-audit services | None. |
Board Recommendation |
What are you voting on?
PG&E Corporation asks its shareholders to approve the 2025 PG&E Corporation Employee Stock Purchase Plan effective January 1, 2026.
|
||||||||||
![]() |
Vote “FOR”
|
“2014 LTIP”
refers to the PG&E Corporation 2014 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
|
||
“2021 LTIP”
refers to the PG&E Corporation 2021 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
|
||
“2024 Annual Report”
refers to the PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company 2024 Joint Annual Report to Shareholders.
|
||
“2025 Annual Meetings”
refers to the 2025 annual meetings of shareholders of PG&E Corporation and the Utility, which will be held concurrently on May 22, 2025.
|
||
“2025 Proxy Materials”
refers to this Proxy Statement, Joint Notice, Proxy Card or Voting Instruction Card, and the 2024 Annual Report.
|
||
“401(k) Plan”
refers to the PG&E Corporation Retirement Savings Plan or the PG&E Corporation Retirement Savings Plan for Union-Represented Employees.
|
||
“AB 1054”
refers to California Assembly Bill 1054 relating to California utilities and wildfire protections
|
||
“Board”
refers to the Board of Directors of either PG&E Corporation or the Utility, as applicable.
|
||
“CD&A”
refers to the section of the Proxy Statement entitled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis.”
|
||
“CEO”
refers to the position of Chief Executive Officer of PG&E Corporation.
|
||
“CFO”
refers to the position of Chief Financial Officer of PG&E Corporation or the Utility, as appropriate.
|
||
“COO”
refers to the position of Chief Operating Officer of the Utility.
|
||
“Chapter 11”
refers to Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the U.S. Code.
|
||
“Corporation”
refers to PG&E Corporation.
|
||
“PG&E Corporation Board”
refers to the Board of Directors of PG&E Corporation.
|
||
“CPUC”
refers to the California Public Utilities Commission.
|
||
“CPUC-reportable ignition”
is a reportable fire incident that meets the following criteria: ignition is associated with a utility’s power lines (either transmission or distribution), something other than a utility’s facilities burned, and the resulting fire travelled more than one meter from the ignition point.
|
||
“ERG”
refers to Employee Resource Group
|
||
“ESG”
refers to Environmental, Social, and Governance topics covered in this Proxy Statement.
|
||
“EPSS”
refers to the Enhanced Powerline Safety Settings, a program to protect public safety by allowing our powerlines to automatically turn off power when a hazard is detected.
|
||
“ESPP”
refers to the 2025 PG&E Corporation Employee Stock Purchase Plan
|
||
“EVP”
refers to the position of Executive Vice President.
|
||
“GAAP”
refers to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
|
||
“Guidelines”
refers to the Corporate Governance Guidelines adopted by the Boards of PG&E Corporation and the Utility.
|
“FRA”
refers to high fire risk areas
|
||
“HFTD”
refers to high fire-threat districts
|
||
“Independent Auditor”
refers to the independent registered public accounting firm.
|
||
“Joint Notice”
refers to the Joint Notice of Annual Meetings of Shareholders of PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company.
|
||
“LTIP”
refers to the 2014 Long-Term Incentive Plan and/or the 2021 Long-Term Incentive Plan.
|
||
“NEO”
or “Named Executive Officer” refers to an officer who is listed in the Summary Compensation Table of this Proxy Statement.
|
||
“Notice of Internet Availability”
refers to the “Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Shareholder Meeting to Be Held on May 22, 2025, and Notice of Annual Meetings of Shareholders” for PG&E Corporation or the Utility, as applicable, which was mailed to certain shareholders starting on or about April 10, 2025.
|
||
“NYSE”
refers to the New York Stock Exchange.
|
||
“PEO”
refers to an officer or officers who serve as “principal executive officer” of PG&E Corporation or Pacific Gas and Electric Company, as appropriate.
|
||
“PG&E”
refers to both PG&E Corporation and its subsidiary, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, or the “Utility.”
|
||
“POR OII”
refers to the Plan of Reorganization Order Instituting Investigation proceeding initiated by the CPUC on September 26, 2019.
|
||
“Proxy”
refers to your authorization for another person or persons to vote your shares at the 2025 Annual Meetings, in the manner indicated on the Proxy. It also may refer to the person or persons so authorized (also called proxy holders).
|
||
“Proxy Card”
refers to your proxy card, on which you may indicate how you would like the named proxy holders to vote your shares at the 2025 Annual Meetings.
|
||
“Proxy Statement”
refers to this 2025 Joint Proxy Statement for PG&E Corporation and the Utility.
|
||
“PSU”
refers to a performance share unit (sometimes also called a performance share).
|
||
“Record Date”
is March 24, 2025. This is the date set by the Boards to determine which shareholders may vote at and attend the 2025 Annual Meetings.
|
||
“RSU”
refers to restricted stock unit.
|
||
“SEC”
refers to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
|
||
“Section 16 Officer”
refers to any “officer” as defined in Rule 16a-1(f) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
|
||
“STIP”
refers to the Short-Term Incentive Plan.
|
||
“SVP”
refers to the position of Senior Vice President.
|
||
“TSR”
refers to total shareholder return, measured by stock price appreciation and dividends paid, relative to companies in the Performance Comparator Group.
|
||
“Utility”
refers to Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation.
|
||
“Utility Board”
refers to the Board of Directors of Pacific Gas and Electric Company.
|
||
“Voting Instruction Card”
refers to the form used by beneficial shareholders or participants in a 401(k) Plan to transmit instructions to the nominee or the plan trustee, respectively, on how to vote any shares for which that shareholder or plan participant has voting rights.
|
||
“VP”
refers to the position of Vice President.
|
||
“WMP”
refers to PG&E’s Wildfire Mitigation Plan.
|
Governance Documents and Policies | |||||||||||
Articles of Incorporation /Bylaws
|
•
|
Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws for PG&E Corporation and the Utility, establishing our corporate governance requirements and shareholder rights.
|
|||||||||
Committee Charters | • |
Charters for the standing committees of the PG&E Corporation and Utility Boards of Directors, including the following (under the header “Board Committees”):
•
Audit Committees of PG&E Corporation and the Utility
•
Executive Committees of PG&E Corporation and the Utility
•
Finance and Innovation Committee of PG&E Corporation
•
People and Compensation Committee of PG&E Corporation
•
Safety and Nuclear Oversight Committees of PG&E Corporation and the Utility
•
Sustainability and Governance Committee of PG&E Corporation
|
|||||||||
Corporate Governance Guidelines
|
• |
Corporate Governance Guidelines for PG&E Corporation and the Utility, which include definitions of “independence” for directors (under the headers “PG&E Corporation Policies and Bylaws” and “Pacific Gas and Electric Company Policies and Bylaws”)
|
|||||||||
Code of Conduct | • |
Current copies of the following codes of conduct, applicable to both companies, are available online through the Compliance and Ethics section of PG&E Corporation’s website (
pgecorp.com/about/compliance-and-ethics.html
) or in the Corporate Governance section of PG&E Corporation’s website (
pgecorp.com/about/corporate-governance.html
) (under the headers “PG&E Corporation Policies and Bylaws” and “Pacific Gas and Electric Company Policies and Bylaws”):
•
Code of Conduct for Employees (including executive officers)
•
Code of Conduct for Directors
|
![]() |
Over the Internet:
You may submit your Proxy and vote your shares over the Internet by going to
proxyvote.com
.
Voting instructions are provided on either your Notice of Internet Access or, if you received your Proxy Materials by mail, your Proxy Card.
|
||||
![]() |
By telephone:
If you received your 2025 Proxy Materials by mail, you may submit your Proxy and vote your shares by calling the toll-free number on the Proxy Card.
|
||||
![]() |
By mail:
If you received your 2025 Proxy Materials by mail, you may submit your Proxy and vote your shares by completing, signing, and dating the Proxy Card and mailing it in the postage-paid envelope provided.
|
![]() |
E-Mail:
CorporateSecretary@pge.com
|
![]() |
U.S. Mail:
Office of the Corporate Secretary
PG&E Corporation/
Pacific Gas and Electric Company
300 Lakeside Drive
Oakland, CA 94612
|
![]() |
E-Mail:
CorporateSecretary@pge.com
|
![]() |
U.S. Mail:
Office of the Corporate Secretary
PG&E Corporation/
Pacific Gas and Electric Company
300 Lakeside Drive
Oakland, CA 94612
|
PG&E Corporation
|
||
2025 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
|
Section 1: Purpose of the plan
|
||||||||||||||
Section 2: Definitions
|
||||||||||||||
1 | (a) |
“Board”
|
||||||||||||
1 | (b) | “Code” | ||||||||||||
1 | (c) | “Committee” | ||||||||||||
1 | (d) | “Company” | ||||||||||||
1 | (e) | “Compensation” | ||||||||||||
1 | (f) | “Corporate Reorganization” | ||||||||||||
1 | (g) | “Eligible Employee” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(h)
|
“Employee”
|
||||||||||||
2 |
(i)
|
“Exchange Act” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(j)
|
“Fair Market Value” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(k)
|
“Offering” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(l)
|
“Offering Date” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(m)
|
“Offering Period” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(n)
|
“Participant” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(o)
|
“Participating Company” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(p)
|
“Plan” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(q)
|
“Plan Account” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(r)
|
“Purchase Date | ||||||||||||
2 |
(s)
|
“Purchase Period”
|
||||||||||||
2 |
(t)
|
“Purchase Price” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(u)
|
“Stock” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(v)
|
“Subsidiary” | ||||||||||||
2 |
(w)
|
“Trading Day” | ||||||||||||
Section 3: Administration of the plan
|
||||||||||||||
3 | (a) |
Administrative powers and responsibilities
|
||||||||||||
Section 4: Enrollment and participation
|
||||||||||||||
3 | (a) |
Offering periods
|
||||||||||||
3 | (b) |
Enrollment
|
||||||||||||
3 |
(c)
|
Duration of Participation
|
||||||||||||
Section 5: Employee contributions
|
||||||||||||||
4 |
(a)
|
Frequency of payroll deductions
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(b)
|
Amount of payroll deductions
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(c)
|
Changing withholding rate
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(d)
|
Discontinuing payroll deductions
|
Section 6: Withdrawal from the plan
|
||||||||||||||
4 |
(a)
|
Withdrawal
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(b)
|
Re-enrollment after withdrawal
|
||||||||||||
Section 7: Change in employment status
|
||||||||||||||
4 |
(a)
|
Termination of employment
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(b)
|
Leave of absence
|
||||||||||||
4 |
(c)
|
Death
|
||||||||||||
Section 8: Plan accounts and purchase of shares
|
||||||||||||||
5 |
(a)
|
Plan accounts
|
||||||||||||
5 |
(b)
|
Purchase price
|
||||||||||||
5 |
(c)
|
Number of shares purchased
|
||||||||||||
5 |
(d)
|
Available shares insufficient
|
||||||||||||
5 |
(e)
|
Issuance of stock
|
||||||||||||
5 |
(f)
|
Unused cash balances
|
||||||||||||
5 | (g) |
Shareholder approval
|
||||||||||||
Section 9: Limitations on stock ownership
|
||||||||||||||
6 |
(a)
|
Five percent limit
|
||||||||||||
6 |
(b)
|
Dollar limit
|
||||||||||||
Section 10: Rights not transferable | ||||||||||||||
Section 11: No rights as an employee | ||||||||||||||
Section 12: No rights as a shareholder
|
||||||||||||||
Section 13: Securities law requirements | ||||||||||||||
Section 14: Stock offered under the plan | ||||||||||||||
7 |
(a)
|
Authorized shares
|
||||||||||||
7 |
(b)
|
Antidilution adjustments
|
||||||||||||
7 |
(c)
|
Reorganizations
|
||||||||||||
Section 15: Amendment or discontinuance | ||||||||||||||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
---|
DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
---|
No information found
Customers
Customer name | Ticker |
---|---|
Exelon Corporation | EXC |
The Williams Companies, Inc. | WMB |
WEC Energy Group, Inc. | WEC |
Xcel Energy Inc. | XEL |
Price
Yield
Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
---|