Pedro Pizarro
Analyst · Truist Securities
Thanks a lot, Sam, and good afternoon, everyone. Let me start by acknowledging that last week, we announced Maria's retirement plans. So this is our last earnings call that we're partnering on together. I'll come back to this at the end of my remarks because if I start now, I may not make it to my comments. But before moving on, I'd like to welcome Susan Hardwick to our Board. She brings over 35 years of leadership experience in the electric and water utilities, including as CEO of American Water, with deep strength in operations, finance and regulatory oversight. We are pleased with our start to the year and the momentum across our business. Edison International's first quarter 2026 core earnings per share was $1.42. Our continued performance reflects disciplined execution, steady operational progress and a clear focus on the priorities that matter most to our customers, communities and capital providers. Importantly, we are reaffirming our 2026 core EPS guidance and other financial targets, including our 5% to 7% core EPS growth over the long term. Our targets are supported by strong visibility into the capital plan, SCE's regulatory outlook and a sustained focus on safety and risk management. Today, I will focus on 3 areas: first, our continued work to make communities safer and more resilient, including wildfire mitigation and rebuilding efforts; second, key legislative developments; and finally, our confidence in the financial outlook, which Maria will expand on in her remarks. Beginning with wildfire mitigation and grid reliability, safety and community protection continue to guide SCE decisions and investments. Over the past several years, the utility has made substantial progress, strengthening the grid, improving situational awareness and reducing wildfire risk across its service area. The planned physical hardening work on the distribution system in high fire risk areas is now about 93% complete, reflecting years of sustained investment in covered conductor and targeted undergrounding. SCE continues to evolve its Public Safety Power Shutoff, or PSPS, protocols, which include enhancing its analysis of on-the-ground conditions, enabled by its vast network of weather stations and overall system visibility. These measures plus the grid hardening work I mentioned earlier, are keeping SCE customers and communities safe. Importantly, in March, the Office of Energy & Infrastructure Safety approved SCE's annual safety certification after its independent assessment of the utility's WMP and SCE's continued progress implementing its plan. SCE's wildfire mitigation plan includes new and expanded tools to improve safety, reliability and efficiency across its network. Let me share some tangible examples. SCE is using AI models to improve grid inspections and identify maintenance needs with faster and more accurate diagnostics and enhance quality control. Since 2023, SCE has developed and deployed AI and machine learning models that are collectively capable of detecting nearly 100 unique object classes and dozens of defect conditions. SCE is also using LiDAR and satellite imagery to support precise proactive vegetation management to help prevent ignitions. The utility is also expanding its deployment of early fault detection tools that identify abnormal grid conditions, enabling earlier awareness and faster response to potential equipment issues or ignition risk. Capabilities like these are increasingly integrated into how SCE monitors conditions, anticipates risk and deploys resources in real time. Turning to the Wildfire Recovery Compensation Program, or WRCP, SCE continues to make progress. SCE has now extended over 1,500 offers totaling over $500 million to community members impacted by the Eaton fire, helping families and individuals move forward more quickly without the delays and uncertainty of traditional litigation. SCE remains committed to administering the program in a transparent way that is responsive to community needs with fast and fair payments. On the legislative front, earlier this month, the California Earthquake Authority released its study. It reinforces that addressing California's growing wildfire risk requires a whole-of-society approach and that the status quo is not working for customers, policyholders or wildfire-impacted communities, who ultimately bear the real and increasing costs of inaction. It presents options for policymaker consideration, including 3 nonexclusive pathways, a defined set of strategies, and more than 2 dozen specific policy choices for reforming California's wildfire, insurance and utility systems. We have provided a summary on Page 3. There is urgency for legislative action, and we remain actively engaged with policymakers and key stakeholders to help shape solutions that support safety, affordability and long-term resilience for California communities. Our team is also fully engaged on the various pieces of proposed legislation pertaining to utilities, with affordability a critical focus. A common goal across wildfire reform and affordability is to build the right whole-of-society approach, allocating wildfire risk equitably across the economy and attracting capital at a reasonable cost on customer bills. This will benefit both customers and capital providers. Operational excellence is a core Edison value as SCE aims to maintain its cost leadership position with the lowest system average rate among the large IOUs in the state. I have shared on prior earnings calls examples of operational excellence in practice, including SCE's use of AI in areas like grid inspections, vegetation management and wildfire situational awareness, including the award-winning AWARE grid monitoring platform. The team continues to explore new AI-enabled process improvements across the entire value chain. Let me share another recent example. All utilities have instances where electricity usage can occur at a location before it is fully linked to an active customer billing record. In the past, identifying those situations required periodic manual checks and often occurred after the fact. Through SCE's internal innovation program and in only a handful of development hours, frontline teams developed an initial proof of concept of an AI-driven approach that continuously monitors for these situations and brings them to the surface earlier with clearer and more actionable insights. Once implemented, we anticipate this approach could yield roughly $25 million in potential unbilled revenue savings over a 3- to 6-month period. It's a good illustration of how smarter systems and disciplined execution translate directly into stronger financial controls and support long-term affordability. Let me now turn briefly to the financial outlook. We remain confident in the company's financial position and long-term trajectory. Major SCE regulatory decisions like the 2025 GRC, cost of capital and legacy wildfire cost recoveries are successfully resolved, providing clear visibility to 2028 earnings. Combined with our operational progress and disciplined capital execution, this all supports our confidence in our long-term targets, including 5% to 7% core EPS growth with no new equity needs. Before I turn it over to Maria, we announced that she will retire on September 1 after transitioning the Edison International CFO role on July 3 to Aaron Moss, who is here in the room with us today. Maria will focus her final months on critical policy priorities, including the SB 254 process and supporting Aaron's transition. This is really bittersweet because Maria and I have partnered continuously for over 15 years across our Edison Mission Energy, SCE and EIX gigs. Our Board, our team and I are grateful for the outstanding leadership she has provided across multiple challenges that many of our investors will remember well, including the EME restructuring, helping our communities recover after tragic wildfires, a global pandemic, 4 SCE GRCs, and shepherding the investment and operational improvement opportunities created by the clean energy transition, historic load growth and the rapid ascendance of AI. Throughout it all, she has shown great financial skill, unflappable balance, a deep commitment to engaging with our investors, some might say a lot of patience dealing with me and a real passion for developing our people, including Aaron. Aaron, Maria and I worked closely together through the EME restructuring, and we kept on going as Aaron took on the EIX and SCE controller roles and most recently as SCE's Chief Financial Officer. He has been a key leader of SCE's operational excellence efforts over the past several years, and many of you know him well already from his extensive investor interactions. I'm excited about and confident in our new chapter together. So Aaron, welcome to this role. Maria, thank you for your partnership. Thank you for your friendship. And now it's time for your 39th and final earnings call remarks. So waiting for you to drop the mic here.