NFPA70 and NFPA 70E standards
Training sessions
Electrical safety training on site. Spanish Training NFPA 70E, around 2,000 workers electricians and non-electricians need medical attention for accidents related with arc flash. Our training on site can help your team to understand the principal conceptual knowledge of responsibilities (employers and employees), hazards and procedures in order to reduce injures, lawsuits and outages.
Don’t compromise safety in the workplace. Enroll in our training sessions and acquire the skills and knowledge necessary to work safely and efficiently in electrical environments.
The training sessions will cover the Standards of the National Fire Protection Association3 (NFPA) 70 and 70E.
NFPA 70
The NFPA 70 is a United States standard for the safe installation of electrical wiring and equipment. It is part of the National Fire Codes series published by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).
The NFPA 70 covers the installation of electrical conductors, equipment, and raceways; signaling and communications conductors, equipment, and raceways; and optical fiber cables and raceways for the following: public and private premises, including buildings, structures, mobile homes, recreational vehicles, and floating buildings, yards, lots, parking lots, carnivals, and industrial substations; installations of conductors and equipment that connect to the supply of electricity; and installations used by the electric utility, such as office buildings, warehouses, garages, machine shops, and recreational buildings that are not an integral part of a generating plant, substation, or control center.
NFPA 70 E
The NFPA 70E is a standard of the NFPA that addresses electrical safety requirements for employees in the workplace and details how to protect workers from the heat of electric arc exposures. The purpose of the standard is to provide a practical safe working area for employees relative to the hazards arising from the use of electricity.
The NFPA 70E describes how to protect electrical workers from three kinds of electrical hazards: electric shock and electrocution, arc-flash (electrical fireball), and arc-blast (electrical explosion at high energy levels).
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Monday – Friday, 8am – 6pm
3706 E North St, Greenville, SC 29615