Title: OVERVIEW OF NFPA 70E (2004 Edition)
1OVERVIEW OF NFPA 70E (2004 Edition)
Standards for Electrical Safety-Related Work
Practice Requirements for Employee Workplaces
Presented By Steven Strayer, CIH, CSP, REHS,
RS Cocciardi and Associates, Inc. (717)
766-4500 (717) 766-3999 (fax) sstrayer_at_cocciardi.c
om
2Electrical Hazards
- Shock 1,000 fatalities per year, gt50 from lt600
volts - Arc-flash
- 35,000o F
- 2,000 severe burn cases per year
- Kill out to 10 feet
- Arc-blast
- Cu expands 67,000 xs from solid to gas
- Pressures thousands of pounds per square feet
- Noise gt160 dB
- Molten shrapnel gt700 mph
3Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA)
- Worker protection police
- General industry (1910) and construction (1926)
- Subpart S electrical
- Methods to eliminate/minimize electrical hazards
- Safe work practices (1910.331-335)
- Training requirement (1910.332)
- Problem Limited specificity (ex. Flash
protection)
4NFPA 70E Standard for Electrical Safety in the
Workplace Background / History
- Assist OSHA in developing workplace safety
- (NFPA 70 NEC Limited Application)
- Four Parts to 70E
- Installation Safety Requirements
- Now Chapter 4 (Articles 400 450)
- Safety Related Work Practices
- Now Chapter 1 (Articles 100 130)
- Safety Related Maintenance Requirements
- Now Chapter 2 (Articles 200 250)
- Safety Requirements for Special Equipment
- Now Chapter 3 (Articles 300 340)
5History
- 1979 1st Edition (Part I Only)
- 1981 2nd Edition (Added Part II)
- 1983 3rd Edition (Added Part III)
- 1988 4th Edition (Minor Revisions)
- 1995 5th Edition (Revised Part I and II)
- 2000 6th Edition (Revised Part II and Added IV)
- 2004 7th Edition (Revised Title Format,
and - primarily Part II)
- NEC format
- Chapters/articles
- Part II now Chapter 1
6Scope
- Public and private premises including building,
structures, mobile homes, RVs, and floating
buildings - Yards, lots, parking lots, carnivals, and
industrial sub-stations - Installations used by electric utilities, such as
offices, buildings, warehouses, garages, machine
shops, recreational that are not an integral part
of a generating plant, sub-station, or control
station - Conductors that connect installations to a supply
of electricity
7Not Covered
- Installations in ships, watercraft, railway
rolling stock, aircraft, or automotive vehicles
other than mobile homes and RVs - Installations underground in mines
- Installation of railways
- Installation of communication equipment (must be
exclusive control of communication utilities) - Installation under exclusive control of electric
utilities (service laterals/meters,
rights-of-ways/easements, and property owned or
leased for purpose of generation, transmission,
transformation, etc.)
8CHAPTER 1 Safety-Related Work Practices
- On Hold For Further Examination
9Chapter 2 Safety Related Maintenance
Requirements
- Preserving or restoring the condition of
electrical equipment and installations for
employee safety. - Article 200 Introduction
- Article 205 General Maintenance Requirements
- Article 210 Substations, Switchgear Assemblies,
Switchboards, Panel Boards, Motor Control
Centers, and Disconnect Switches - Article 215 Premises Wiring
- Article 220 Controller Equipment
- Article 225 Fuses and Circuit Breakers
- Article 230 Rotating Equipment
- Article 235 Hazardous (Classified) Locations
- Article 240 Batteries and Battery Rooms
- Article 245 Portable Electric Tools and
Equipment - Article 250 Personal Safety and Protective
Equipment (Inspections and Testing)
10Chapter 3 Safety Requirements For Special
Equipment
- Special Equipment Includes
- Article 300 Introduction
- Article 310 Electrolytic Cells
- Article 320 Batteries/Battery Rooms
- Article 330 - Lasers
11CHAPTER 4 INSTALLATION SAFETY
REQUIREMENTSBased on NFPA 70 - NEC
- Article 400
- General Requirements for Electrical
Installations - Article 410
- Wiring Design and Protection
- Article 420
- Wiring Methods, Components, and Equipment for
General Use - Article 430
- Specific Purpose Equipment and Installations
- Article 440
- Hazardous (Classified) Locations Class I, II,
and III, Divisions I and II, and Class I, Zones
0, I and II - Article 450
- Special Systems
12Chapter 1 SRWP
- Article 100 Definitions
- Qualified Person
- Unqualified Person
- Limited Approach Boundary
- Restricted Approach Boundary
- Prohibited Approach Boundary
- Flash Protection Boundary
- Energized Electrical Work/Electrically Safe Work
Condition - Article 110 General
- Practices/Procedures for employees working on or
near energized conductors/circuit parts and
unqualified individuals with other equipment - Change Multi-employer worksites Hazcom
13- Training
- Risk of electrical hazard not reduced to a safe
level by Chapter 4 - Classroom/OTJ Degree determined by risk
- Include emergency procedures First Aid/CPR,
Methods of Release
14- Qualified Persons
- Precautionary Techniques
- PPE
- Insulating/Shielding Materials/Tools
- Test Equipment
- Distinguishing Live Parts
- Determine Nominal/Voltage
- Approach Distances
- Hazard Evaluation (Including Non-electrical)
- OJT personnel if under direct QP supervision
15- Unqualified Persons
- Awareness
- Precautions
- Hazards
- Electrical Safety Program
- Provide awareness and self-discipline
- ID electrical safety principals
- Inspect/evaluate
- Insulation and enclosure integrity
- Plan and document procedures
- Deenergize
- Anticipating the unexpected
- ID and minimize hazards
- Employee protection
16- ID Electrical Safety Controls
- Assumed energized
- No bare-hand contact
- Deenergizing procedures
- Training
- Equipment use for ID of hazards
- Equipment training
- Categorize tasks
17- ID procedures when working on gt50 volts
- Purpose
- Qualifications
- Hazard/extent of task
- Limits of approach
- Safe work practices
- PPE
- Insulating tools/materials
- Special precautions
- Diagrams/details/pictures
- References
18- Hazard/risk evaluation procedures
- Job briefing(s) each shift or more
- G. Work Permit Procedures
-
19CHAPTER II General Requirements For Electrical
Work Practices
- On/near exposed electric conductors
- Electrically safe work conditions
- Exceptions - ? 50 volts
- Additional increased hazard
- Operations or equipment design
20- Article 120 Establishing On Electrically Safe
Work - Condition
- Must follow LO/TO procedures and confirm
(Test) - Reference 29CFR1910.147
- Article 130 Working On or Near Live Parts
- Change
- Energized Electrical Work Permit
- Circuit/equipment description
- Justification
- Safe work practices
- Shock hazard analysis and boundaries
- PPE
- Documentation of job briefing
- Authorization
- Exception - Voltage measurements
- - Testing
- - Troubleshooting
- B. Shock Hazard Analysis/Boundaries
21- Approach Boundaries
- Limited
- Restricted
- Prohibited
22- Flash Hazard Analysis and Boundaries
- 4ft (? 600 volts and not greater than 300 kA
cycles) - Calculation of boundary (incident energy) for
gt600 volts - Boundary at 5 j/cm2 (1.2 cal/cm2)
- PPE Conform to ANSI/ASTM criteria
23- Hazard/Risk Category Classification Table
- Categories 1 4 (can be -1)
- PPE ranges from t-shirt/pants to flash suits and
shields - Also addresses need for voltage rated gloves and
tools - Clothing material
- Category 0 natural fibers (weight gt4.5
oz/yd2) (assume lt2 cal/cm2) - Category 1 flame resistant (4 cal/cm2)
- Category 2 1 plus cotton underwear (8
cal/cm2) - Category 3 2 plus FR coveralls (25 cal/cm2)
- Category 4 2 plus multi-layer flash suit
(40 cal/cm2) - Synthetics which melt below 600o F
24- LIMITED APPROACH BOUNDARY
- No unqualified persons, unless advised of
hazards, escorted by QP - Conditions for qualified persons
- Flash protection
- RESTRICTED APPROACH BOUNDARY
- Qualified person Do not cross or take a
conductive object past, unless - Person is insulated
- Live part is insulated
- Person is insulated from other conductive objects
- PROHIBITED APPROACH BOUNDARY
- Qualified person
- Only if body part is insulated
25PERSONAL PROTECTION EQUIPMENT (PPE)
- Conform to ANSI/ASTM Standards
- Based on hazard/risk evaluations
26- OTHER COMPONENTS
- Alertness
- Blind reaching
- Illumination ANSI IES-RP-7-1991 Generally
50-100 foot candles depending on - Age
- Speed
- Accuracy
- Background Reflection
- Conductive Articles
27OTHER PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT
- Insulated tools (within Limited Approach
Boundary) - Ropes/handlines
- Grounding equipment/GFCIs
- Ladders
- Rubber insulating equipment
- Physical/mechanical barriers no closer than
Restricted Approach Boundary - Alerting
- Signs/tags
- Barricades
- Attendants
28USE OF SPECIFIC SAFETY RELATED EQUIPMENT AND WORK
PRACTICES
- Test instruments
- Energizing/de-energizing
- Portable electrical equipment
- Conductive work locations (GFCIs)
- Connecting plugs
- LOCKOUT/TAGOUT PRACTICES
- AND DEVICES
29Questions / Answers