- 1.Dr. Sadeq AlAbdulwahab Middle East Training Manager AVO
Training Institute, Inc. Mr. Dennis K. Neitzel, CPE Director
Emeritus AVO Training Institute, Inc.
2.
- 33,000 persons annually injured (all injuries) in US industry,
though this country professionally insists to implement electrical
safety standards in the industry.
- Electrical hazards are intangible, complicated, dangerous.
- Prevention of electrical hazards requires knowledge of
electrical systems, awareness of electrical hazards, understanding
of best electrical work practices, and use of personal protective
equipment (PPE).
- Prevention of electrical hazards requires professional
management of electrical safety in all electrical industries.
- Management of electrical safety is to direct the design,
planning, implementation, auditing and inspection of safe
electrical work practice program.
3. Administrator Regulates electrical safety programs and
procedures. Engineer Analyzes the electrical hazards. Auditor Links
the corporate safety work practice tointernational standards for
electrical safetyInspector Monitors daily electrical work
activities 4.
- Enhancing internal safety awareness:
- Applying External Safety Standards:
- Inculcationof safety standards
- Authorization of electrical Qualified Person:
- Examination of persons understanding of safety work practices,
electrical hazards and PPE.
- Practical Evaluation of person in performing energization
/restoration procedure.
- Control of Safety Documentation:
- Types of Documentation : Permit to Work, Sanction For Test and
Limitation of Access.
- Purpose of Documentation:The consensus among Controllers,
Operators and technicians.
- Contents of Documentation: work location, switching time, lock
numbers, tag codes, and authorized details
Promotion of Safety Performance Authorization and Safety
Documents 5.
- Conducting a periodic Survey
- Evaluation of the effectiveness of the Safety Program
- Monitor the correlation between written and act in the
practice
- Adapt the program with system development
- Enhance the reality of the Electrical Safety Program
Survey of Safe Work Practices Petersen, D. (2000) 6.
- The electrical hazards analyses comprise:
- Electrical shock analysis
- Arc blast hazard analysis
- The Electrical Hazards Analyses is needed to help
determine:
- Personal Protective Equipment
- HazardApproach Boundaries
Electrical Hazards Analysis 7.
- Apply Failure Mode, Effects, and Criticality Analysis (FMECA)
by answering 6 questions:
- What could happen in the power system?
- What is the probability of the incident happening?
- If the incident occurs what is the impact?
- What can be done to mitigate the problems or potential
incidents?
- What can be done to reduce the impact should the incident
occur?
- How much exposure is there to employees and/or property?
- The result of reliability study :
- Main Time To Failure (MTTF)
- Main Time Between Failure (MTBF)
- Main Time Between Maintenance (MTBM)
- Main Time Between Replacement (MTBR)
- First step is t he risk identification to identify the major
electrical faults that frequently occur in the company.
- Second Step isin the risk estimation to determine the fault
effects on humans, power systems, and corporate production.
- Third Step is the risk evaluation to seek solutions that reduce
the risk of electrical faults
Electrical Reliability Study Electrical Risk Management 8.
- Evaluation of Existing Safe Work Practices.
- Review of Electrical Hazard Analyses.
- Development of Job-Task-Hazards Matrix.
- Observation of maintenance and operations procedures.
- Assessment of Training Needs.
- Align the corporate safety program to updated international
standards.
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration ( OSHA )
regulations seek to encourage employers and employees to reduce
workplace hazards.
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers ( IEEE )
standards concentrate on explanations of electrical technical
activities and calculation of power systems.
- National Fire Protection Association ( NFPA ) standards focus
on prevention of fire hazards. NFPA 70E is related to electrical
hazards.
Safety Needs AssessmentElectrical Safety Standards 9.
- This certification may represent the corporate obligation of
international safety standards.
- It should be approved by safety regulators.
- The insurance cost should depend on certificate grade.
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- Grade A :Workplace is electrically Safe.
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- Grade B : Workplace is electrically safe, but existing safe
work programs and procedures should be updated.
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- Grade C : Although company has fair safe work practices, it
needs to update Arc Flash Hazard Analysis.
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- Grade D : Workplace may face several electrical hazards.
Existing safe work practices should be redeveloped.
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- Grade F : Workplace is electrically dangerous. New safety
program should be designed.
Safety Audit CertificationSafety Certificate grade 10.
- Inspector is the eyes of safety management.
- Inspector should check the validity of safety
documentation.
- Inspector shouldmonitor people with respect to Arc Flash
labels.
- Inspector reports violation of safety rules.
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- Arc flash and thermal protection equipment prevents worker from
injuries due to arc flash hazards.
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- Head and eye protection equipment prevents whole face and head
from arc and blast hazard.
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- Hand protection equipment prevents worker from receiving an
electrical shock.
Electrical Safety Inspector Roles PPE Usage and Selection
11.
- The management of electrical safety should comprise four units:
Administration, Engineering, Audit, and Inspection.
- This approach reduces the Total Recordable Incident Rate (TRIR)
and Lost Time Incident Rate (LTIR).
- It helps companies to protect workers, reduces accidents,
reduces insurance cost, and increase production.
- AVOis ready to support you by constancy required to achieve
this approach of electrical safety.
12. [email_address] Comply with NFPA 70E