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Electrical Hazards Awareness Briefing Excavation and Trenching Module 5

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Electrical Hazards Awareness Briefing Excavation and Trenching Module 5 These tools must be used with care! Serious Injury at DOE Site when 13.2kV Cable Struck A ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electrical Hazards Awareness Briefing Excavation and Trenching Module 5


1
Electrical Hazards Awareness BriefingExcavation
and TrenchingModule 5
2
These tools must be used with care!
3
Serious Injury at DOE Site when 13.2kV Cable
Struck
  • A laborer was burned and rendered unconscious
    when his jackhammer hit a buried 13,200 volt
    electrical power cable.

4
Typical Tasks That Expose Personnel to
Underground Power Lines
  • Construction site excavation
  • Jack-hammering
  • Well drilling
  • Landscaping
  • Trenching for piping
  • Fence installation

5
Excavation Program Elements
  • Designate a Competent Person to oversee all
    excavation jobs and train to understand the
    electrical hazard
  • Use written excavation procedure and excavation
    permit
  • Require an excavation/trenching checklist to be
    used in job planning
  • Require non-intrusive surveys of areas and
    develop an interference map of area
  • Ensure excavation planning requirements flow down
    to subcontractors

6
Electrical Hazard Identification
  • Perform detailed drawing and map review including
    original site drawings and recent project
    drawings
  • Understand that drawings and maps, however, may
    not be up to date or indicate all field routings
    correctly
  • Perform walk-down of site surrounding the
    excavation area and look for conduits and
    raceways that extend underground and could cross
    into the excavation work zone
  • Discuss excavation area with facility site
    knowledge
  • Look for new asphalt, manholes not marked on
    prints or disturbed soil to identify potential
    for unmarked interferences

7
Field Investigation
  • Perform non-intrusive surveys of excavation area
    using trained and certified utility locators
  • Mark surface with interferences and verify
    immediately prior to start of excavation
  • Know limitations of non-intrusive equipment
  • GPR has been off target by 3 feet and may not
    identify some interferences
  • Voltage proximity detectors are shielded by
    ground wire or conduit
  • Current proximity detectors will not detect if
    electrical load is turned off

8
Identifying Interferences
  • De-energize and lockout known electrical
    hazards-Dont let schedule and convenience take
    precedent.
  • Hand excavate interferences within excavation
    limits
  • Look for different types of soil in the
    excavation area or for colored concrete that may
    indicate presence of underground electrical line
  • Consider use of vacuum excavation technology for
    uncovering interferences
  • Use caution when hand digging-even shovels and
    post hole diggers can damage direct burial cables

9
Identifying Interferences
  • Use appropriate PPE (voltage rated gloves and
    footwear) when identifying electrical
    interferences
  • PPE is important since detection of hidden
    utilities can not always be guaranteed
  • Use double-insulated electrical tools
  • Use fiberglass-insulated shovels and picks when
    excavating by hand
  • Use rubber mats as appropriate

10
Other Safe Practices
  • Stop work and call a time out if an unidentified
    obstruction is found during excavation
  • Revise maps and drawings to reflect actual found
    field conditions before closing excavation permit
  • Consider use of electronic drill stops when
    drilling in concrete (DOE Electrical Safety
    Handbook Section 11)
  • Observe all Power Line Right of Ways and notify
    power company prior to excavation

11
Conclusion
  • Remember, you can avoid the pain and suffering
    that can happen when you contact an underground
    energized electrical power line
  • Implement and follow the practices in this module
  • Stop work when in doubt
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