A moderate earthquake shook Southern California late Tuesday morning. It was felt throughout the region, but did little significant damage. Local energy utilities reported scattered outages but no major impact on the electricity and natural gas infrastructure.

Caltech seismology experts placed the quake’s magnitude at 5.4 on the Richter Scale. The 6.7 magnitude Northridge event of January 2004 caused widespread death, injury and damage to infrastructure.

The quake was centered in the eastern part of the San Gabriel Valley near the Chino Hills, which is about 20-25 miles east of downtown Los Angeles and was described as a “shallow” temblor about seven miles below the earth’s surface. Southern California Edison Co. (SCE), headquartered in Rosemead, CA, less than 15 miles from the presumed epicenter, reported scattered outages in about a half dozen communities closest to the quake’s center.

SCE spokesperson Steve Conroy told news media there were no reported problems in the transmission system, nor at any of the utility-operated generation plants, including the 2,200 MW San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station (SONGS) along the coast in the northern end of San Diego County. “Both SONGS units are operating without any problems,” Conroy said.

Distribution problems were reported in the immediate Chino Hills-Pomona-Brea area in the far eastern end of Los Angeles County caused by the power lines swinging together and touching. At least one fire in a local distribution substation was also reported, Conroy said.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Los Angeles-based Southern California Gas Co. reported no problems.

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