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Electrical Safety ES Global Developments

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25% of all fires occur due to electricity (NFPA) ... Evolvement of ES Standards / organizations-United States. NFPA - NEC (1897) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electrical Safety ES Global Developments


1
-Electrical Safety-ES Global Developments
  • P.G. Sreejith
  • Cholamandalam MS Risk Services Ltd.

www.cholarisk.com
2
In this presentation
  • Section I
  • Electrical hazards
  • Electrical accidents Statistics
  • Humans Electricity
  • Electrical Safety Programme elements
  • Section II
  • Global Developments in Electrical Safety

3
Electrical Accidents-Statistics
  • 25 of all fires occur due to electricity (NFPA)
  • 411 deaths from job related electrical accidents
    per year (NIOSH)
  • Electrocution - the fifth leading cause of death
    (1982 - 1990) NIOSH
  • About 12 deaths due to electrocution NCRB,
    (India)
  • 42 of total fires occur due to electrical
    sources (Source -OISD)
  • 8 deaths that occur in Indian factories are due
    to electricity

4
ELECTRICAL ACCIDENTS- 10 year Period, Chemical
Industry
5
(No Transcript)
6
Electrical Near-Misses Accidents- Major Causes
  • Working on live equipment w/o authorization or
    PPE
  • Wiring mistakes coupled with failure of
    safe-energy conditions
  • Leaving unsafe conditions

7
Electricity and People
  • A person usually offers a lesser resistance for
    the electricity
  • The person forms a completed circuit when
    touching the ground
  • Electricity always tries to travel to ground

8
ELECTRICAL FIRES .
  • ELECTRICAL FAULTS (Contd.)
  • STATIC DISCHARGES
  • LIGHTNING
  • USING ORDINARY ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT IN HAZARDOUS
    AREAS

9
Earthing
  • Most electrical equipment is designed with a
    earthing system
  • Earth all equipment with metallic body (TVs?)
  • Double Single earthing- differentiation?
  • Carry out ER tests annually as per NFPA 70
  • Take action on high ER values
  • Identify all earth pits, maintain a Earth Pit lay
    out

10
Earth Leakage Circuit Breakers
  • ELCBs reduce the likelihood of fatal shocks
  • Detect small amount of leakage current and
    automatically switch off the power
  • Can be used with extension cords and portable
    tools
  • Fuses and circuit breakers protect equipment, not
    people
  • Use the right sensitivity ELCBs (30, 100, 300 mA)

11
Static Electricity
  • Created when materials rub together
  • Can cause shocks or even minor skin burns
  • Can damage sensitive electronic equipment
  • Reduced or prevented by
  • Proper grounding
  • Anti-Static rubber matting
  • Bonding earthing of equipment, pipelines

12
Electrical Fire Protection
  • Use Linear Heat Sensing cables in cable cellars
    along with smoke detectors
  • Consider all major electrical fires in EMP
  • Install master control switches outside all
    stores
  • Maintain PFEs for electrical rooms
  • Consider local flooding systems for critical
    panels/ switchgear panels

13
Case Study
  • An electrician received a shock while trying to
    replace a tube light ballast in live power
    condition.
  • He touched a live conductor. He was not wearing
    rubber gloves. Current entered his right hand
    through his little finger and exited through his
    left hand.
  • Post Accident Correction
  • Working on live circuits not permitted
  • LOTO to be strictly enforced

14
Equipment Operators
  • Never tamper with electrical interlocks
  • Do not repair electrical components of your
    machine
  • Properly shut off machinery before operation
  • Obey warning signs and follow safe procedures
  • Follow PTW procedures strictly

15
Electrical Preventive Maintenance
  • Identification of critical Electrical Equipment
  • Emergency lighting
  • Fire Alarm System
  • Protection Supply DC System
  • UPS System, Battery Banks
  • Electrical Maintenance Procedures to be aligned
    with NFPA 70 B

16
Planning for EPM
  • Personal Safety
  • Equipment Failure
  • Production Economics

17
Electrical Preventive Maintenance
  • Implement EPM without slippage
  • Carry out all tests (ER, IR, transformer oil,
    DGA, LP system, transformer protective devices-
    simulation, FA system for electrical rooms, etc.)
  • Adopt NFPA 70 E / B for electrical maintenance
  • Adopt Risk Based maintenance
  • Use predictive maintenance tools (hotspot
    detector, Ultrasonic detectors, Thermography)

18
All electrical accidents are preceded by rise in
temperature sound
19
ELECTRICAL
SAFETY AUDIT
  • A systematic approach to critically analyze the
    existing Electrical Procedures and Practices from
    safety point of view

20
Global Developments in Electrical Safety
21
Present Status - ES-India
  • ES Awareness is slowly growing
  • Use of RCCBs in the rise, finer details are yet
    to be understood by many
  • More ES workshops / seminars are conducted in
    India
  • Statutory regulations are enforced strictly
    (Karnataka, Delhi - Use of RCCBs mandatory in
    residential buildings)
  • Many industries are re-aligning their Electrical
    practices based on international standards (NFPA,
    IEEE, etc.)

22
Evolvement of ES Standards / organizations-United
States
  • NFPA - NEC (1897)
  • NESC (1913), from IEEE
  • NIOSH (Research example development of voltage
    detector that will signal the person if he gets
    close to live power)-1970
  • OSHA (1970)
  • NFPA 70 E B (1979) -approved by OSHA
  • Electrical Trauma Centre, Chicago (1990)
  • NESF(1994), by UL, NFPA, NEMA, CPSC

23
ES Products...
24
ES Auditing Techniques
  • Electrical Risk Assessment using
    Semi-Quantitative Risk Ranking (SQRR) technique
  • Emergency Lighting Risk Assessment
  • Benchmarking against applicable standards
  • NFPA 780 Lightning Protection
  • NFPA 70 M Electrical Preventive Maintenance
  • NFPA 70 E Personal Safety from Electrical Safety

25
Electrical Risk Assessment (SQRR Technique)
  • Risk Ranking based on severity, probability

High Risk- Statutory Non-compliance, FE hazards,
Shock hazards, Risks that could result in
immediate threat to life property. Immediate
correction Medium Risk - Maintenance
flaws,Operational issues-correction at the next
available opportunity. Low Risk - Mainly
improvement measures, long term implementation
26
RCCB Tripping
  • How do we solve this problem in India ?

Bypass it !!!
27
ES related Information
  • Indian Electricity Rule, 1956 (2000 rev.)
  • (MoP, CEA web site,http//powermin.nic.in)
  • Lightning Protection Risk Assessmentwww.furse.com
  • National Electrical Safety Foundation
    www.nesf.org
  • Free safety Power Point presentations
    http//siri.org/
  • Electrical Accidents http//www.safteng.net
  • IEEE IAS ES WS Delhi Dec. 2004

28
Standards Codes
  • NFPA 70 E B- E-Safety Maintenance
  • NFPA 780- Lightning Protection
  • API RP 2003- Static Electricity
  • API RP 500- HAC
  • OSHA 29 CFR- part 1910- Arc Flash
  • NFPA 70- NEC
  • IEEE 1584- Arc Flash Protection
  • NFPA 77- Static Electricity
  • OSHA CFR 1926-Personnel Electrical Safety

29
Summary
  • Electricity will try to reach ground even if it
    means going through a person
  • Earthing has an important role in ES
  • Always inspect power tools and cords and do not
    use them if damaged
  • Do not attempt to repair electrical equipment
    unless trained and qualified
  • Understand effects of Lightning- it could save
    your life!
  • Major fires, explosions occurred due to ESD ,
    lightning in flammable atmospheres
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