Arc Flash Electrical Safety NFPA 70E®
Electrical hazards remain one of the leading causes of serious workplace injuries, and NFPA 70E® training is essential for ensuring employees understand how to prevent arc flash and shock incidents. This course equips workers and leaders with the knowledge required to meet OSHA and NFPA 70E® standards while reducing risk and liability. Attendees leave with practical tools to strengthen safety culture and apply safe electrical work practices immediately.
Description
Purpose:
This two‑day instructor‑led course provides essential training required under OSHA 29 CFR 1910 Subpart S and NFPA 70E® for anyone who works on or around energized electrical equipment. Participants gain a deep understanding of electrical hazards, safe work practices, risk assessment procedures, PPE requirements, lockout/tagout, and arc flash program fundamentals.
Important Takeaways:
Learners will walk away with the ability to recognize and mitigate electrical hazards, interpret arc flash labels, complete an energized electrical work permit, and apply the safety-related work and maintenance practices required by NFPA 70E®. Real‑world case studies, hazard demonstrations, and interactive exercises ensure learners can apply concepts on the job.
Who Will Benefit:
The course is ideal for electrical workers, maintenance technicians, engineers, supervisors, and safety professionals responsible for implementing or maintaining electrical safety programs. It also benefits any employee who may be exposed to electrical hazards as part of their daily work environment.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this training, participants will be able to:
- Explain the purpose and requirements of NFPA 70E® and its relationship to OSHA regulations.
- Identify shock, arc flash, and arc blast hazards and their common causes.
- Conduct electrical risk assessments and determine appropriate hazard control methods.
- Select and use proper arc‑rated PPE based on equipment labels and job tasks.
- Interpret arc flash labels, one‑line diagrams, and analysis reports.
- Establish electrically safe work conditions using lockout/tagout procedures.
- Complete energized electrical work permits accurately and appropriately.
- Apply safety-related work and maintenance practices for electrical equipment and systems.
Course Outline
Module 1: Electrical Safety & the Qualified Electrical Worker
- Responsibilities and requirements of a qualified electrical worker
- Who sets electrical safety standards: NFPA 70E® and others
- OSHA’s role in electrical safety regulation
- Building an electrical safety culture
Module 2: Understanding Electrical Hazards
- Severity of electrical injuries with case study examples
- Shock, arc flash, and arc blast hazards
- Primary causes of arc flash incidents
- Identifying electrical hazards and introduction to GFCIs
Module 3: Risk Assessment & Hazard Mitigation
- Ratings of arc-rated PPE and selection basics
- Importance of grounding systems
- Risk assessment procedures
- Emergency response considerations
Module 4: Safety-Related Work Practices
- Overview of OSHA 29 CFR 1910 and NFPA 70E® requirements
- Safe operation of electrical meters and equipment categories
- Establishing electrically safe work conditions
- Working on or near energized parts and determining approach distances
Module 5: Arc Flash Analysis & Documentation
- Completing energized electrical work permits
- Understanding an arc flash analysis
- Interpreting arc flash hazard warning labels
- Reading arc flash one‑line diagrams
Module 6: Safety-Related Maintenance Requirements
- General maintenance requirements
- Common electrical equipment and premises wiring
- Circuit breakers, fuses, and rotating equipment
- Hazardous locations, batteries, and portable tools
Module 7: Requirements for Special Equipment
- Electrolytic cells and specialized electrical components
- Batteries and battery room safety
- Lasers and power electronic equipment
- Unique hazards and mitigation strategies
Module 8: Electrical Safety Program Development
- Planning and implementing an electrical safety program
- Training and qualification requirements
- Interpreting arc flash analysis reports and defining PPE requirements
- Documentation and recordkeeping essentials
Who Should Attend
- Electricians and electrical technicians
- Maintenance personnel
- Engineers (electrical, facilities, reliability)
- Safety and EHS professionals
- Supervisors and operations managers
- Contractors working near energized equipment
- Any employee needing NFPA 70E®–compliant training