ES Audit Checkpoints
ES Audit Checkpoints
ES Audit Checkpoints
P.G. Sreejith
Pillai_sreejith@hotmail.com
P.G. Sreejith
Cholamandalam MS Risk Services Ltd.
Chennai, INDIA
Pillai_sreejith@hotmail.com
Earthing defects
Use of non-standard fuse wires
Bypassing of protection devices
Deteriorated insulation
Selection, deployment of PFEs ( (Portable Fire Extinguishers)
Sealing of cable passes, openings, baffle walls (Passive Fire Protection)
Tracking possibility
Unused openings in live panels, etc.
Possibility of ground fault / short circuit
Mechanical protection to cables
Loose terminations due to improper supports, crimping
Improper gland installation, wrong lug size
Over-rated fuses, wrongly set protection relays, etc.
Earthing System
P.G. Sreejith
Pillai_sreejith@hotmail.com
Lightning Protection
While reviewing lightning protection, are both the plan and elevation of structures, etc. considered?
ESP (Electronic system Protection) for electronic system / equipment
Is the earthing for the electrical and lightning systems interconnected?
Are the storage tanks / chimneys and other special structures protected?
Earth electrodes- maintenance / periodic tests / acceptable value
Awareness of basic concepts of lightning such as types of lightning, predictability factor, protection concepts,
etc.
Are the protection relays in place and set in the main PCC / MCC?
Are the relays set in accordance with calculated, design parameters in mind?
Are they calibrated and tested periodically?
Availability of HRC fuses, standard fuse wires, MCBs, MCCBs, RCCBs, etc.
Are the transformer protection devices in place? (Bucholtz Relay, Oil Temperature Relay, Winding
Temperature relay, Silica Gel Breather, Explosion Vent, etc.)
Electrical Single Line Diagram / Lay Out Diagram / Equipment Layout / Electrical Control diagram
Field Visit
The field /plant visit is the most important part of the ESA programme. This involves visiting the plant to
identify electrical hazards as per the scope of the audit. In electrical safety audits, the incoming electrical
supply receiving section (outdoor substation and main transformer) is inspected first. Then the main sub-
station housing the PCCs or MCCs and the cable gallery (if present) is inspected. Next are the electrical
equipments installed in various process sections, the cabling and the distribution transformers located in
the plant are visited. The aspects such as earthing, lightning protection, maintenance condition, loose
cabling, temporary wiring, electrical fire hazards, shock potential, etc. are critically looked-into. The
checklist provided in the Pre-audit Preparation section is rather a comprehensive attempt, covering almost
all-electrical safety aspects.
The verification of the actual installation against available drawing (such as electrical single line diagram,
earthing lay out, etc.) is also carried out during the field visit.
Clarification / discussion is carried out with the plant officials (electrical /safety) during the field visit. A
senior electrical engineer and preferably, safety officer should also be part of the external electrical safety
audit team. This is a continuous activity right from the beginning of the audit. Clarifications help to ascertain
facts and to understand the system in a better manner. The on-site interactions will help to clear many
doubts and to suggest many practical solutions to the client.
Normally, this part is taken-up after the field visits. All the relevant maintenance documentation, test
records, electrical records, electrical inspector reports, OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) service
manuals, History cards are subjected to detailed examination. All the relevant drawings (electrical single
line diagram, earthing layout, hazardous area classification drawings, protection system schematic,
equipment layout, lightning protection drawings) are also checked against actual installation and
commended upon, with reference to applicable standards.
Report Format
There is no standard ESA report format available. Considering aspects such as clarity of report, usefulness
to the client, and to streamline the report, the following format is recommended.
The implication column helps the user to appreciate the hazard, to understand the potential and to prioritize
the implementation based on its severity. The report format where the observations and recommendations
are written together (non-tabular format) is popular and is the one that is commonly in use nowadays. The
tabular report format helps to streamline the report, by shedding the unnecessary written matter, making
the report crisp and focussed.
The implementation priority helps the management to take appropriate action in an organized manner.
Several clients specifically requested LPA to recommend implementation priority of the recommendation.
electrostatic dissipation
in flammable
atmospheres
2 -Medium Risk -Critical -Priority B
-Defects in protection system -Corrective action in the next
-Maintenance flaws that could available opportunity
lead to equipment failure
/fire / flash
-Operational problems due to
poor illumination wrong
identification, inadequate
clearance, etc.
-Deterioration of equipment
insulation / earthing condition
due to lack of monitoring
/testing
Management Abstract
The management abstract as the name implies contains the salient observations noted during the audit and
the recommendations in a nutshell. The top management is a busy lot and generally appreciates when
matters are presented in a crisp and focussed manner, highlighting the most critical aspects. They will be
eager to understand those hazards that are harmful to their employees and to the property. Any prudent
management will consider seriously potential hazards that can affect their business (directly as well as
indirectly) and will take immediate action. Considering the importance of this section, every care has to be
taken in choosing appropriate words and to effectively convey the message, depending upon the criticality
of the hazard.
Introduction
This section generally contains the ESA scope of work, exclusions in the audit scope, assistance provided
during the audit, details of the audit team, clients officials contacted during the audit, audit methodology,
and the audit duration. This section can also contain summary of the clients safety system, safety auditing
policy, training strategy, Accident Prevention Programme, and the management commitment towards
safety. The details of clients business interests and other specific details of the plant process also could
form part of this section.
The overview section contains the details of the electrical power supply and the power distribution. This
section can also discuss the details of critical electrical installations, name plate details of critical electrical
equipment, recent alterations/additions carried in the electrical installation, captive generation details, etc.
This section can also discuss about the future expansion plans with respect to electrical capacity.
This is the most important section containing the specific observations and recommendations in the plant
observed during the audit. Normally, the observations are noted area/plant wise. Checklist
method is found effective and various standards (both statutes and non-statutes) are available for
reference. The format for this section is given in this paper.
The review of the existing lightning protection system of the plant as per the applicable national (IS: 2309)
and international standards (NFPA 780) is carried out in this section on a sample basis. The various
maintenance aspects are also evaluated in this section. If required, the fundamental step of ascertaining
the need for protecting buildings /structures by calculating the risk factor is also carried out. The experience
the audit team gained while auditing other similar plants /installations are also discussed in the report for
the benefit of the client.
ESD (Electro-Static Discharges) is a critical area where the potential ESD hazards are to be identified and
necessary solutions are to be provided. Making the client aware of the potential accidents that can occur
due to Electro-static discharges, minimum ignition energy required for fire /explosion, concept of equi-
potential bonding and earthing, etc. are also crucial to make them understand the ESD hazards in the right
light. Many plants handling flammable chemicals do not understand the concepts of ESD and hence do not
follow de-canting procedure that is very unsafe. The reference standards used for identifying and
controlling electro-static hazards are IS:7389 and NFPA 77.
This is another crucial area that needs to be evaluated critically. Although hazardous areas are critical, they
are mostly neglected in most of the hazardous plants. The design principle of flameproof equipment makes
it a special equipment that needs special care. Area classification into zones and installing various types of
electrical equipment are the critical factors in controlling accidents in hazardous areas. Once the hazardous
areas are classified and the right electrical equipments are installed, the onus of maintaining these special
electrical equipments becomes the duty of the electrical maintenance personnel. In almost 90 % of the
cases, the maintenance of these electrical equipments is not up to the required level.
The hazardous area classification is carried out by process experts depending upon the possibility of
existence of flammable vapour/gases as per IS:5572 /OISD 113 /API RP 500. The selection of electrical
equipments is carried out as per IS:5571 and is to be maintained as per IS:13346 and IS:2148 provides the
details of special features of flameproof equipments.
The electrical accident record in the plant is analyzed in this section. Discussions are also carried out with
electrical and safety officers to fully understand the accident and to pinpoint the root cause. The
accidents report format as well as the root cause identification methods are analyzed and
recommendations are provided.
Review of Fire Hazards and Fire Protection Measures for Electrical Installations
This section covers the identified potential electrical fire hazards, fire prevention methods and the fire
protection strategies to be adopted by the client. The suitable fire detection (LHS Linear Heat Sensing
cable, smoke/fire detectors) and extinguishing medium (fixe as well as portable) are also recommended
depending upon the application. The focus areas will be the electrical installation / equipment where
potential of fire hazards are relatively high such as MCC/PCC rooms, transformers, power plants, DG
rooms, cable galleries, warehouses, store rooms, office buildings, etc.
The electrical maintenance aspects in toto will be reviewed in this section. The standards followed
competency of O&M personnel, tests carried out as part of maintenance, etc. will be reviewed in detail.
Implementation slippage, test value interpretation, appropriateness of action taken, etc. will also be
evaluated. Various national standards (partial list provided in this paper) are used for this purpose.
Tests that are carried on sample basis are evaluated in this section. Tests are carried out when it is felt that
the values recorded are not credible. Normally, the following tests are carried out.
The test procedures that are adopted in the plant are also verified against national standards. OSD
standards as well as national standards provide valuable guidance regarding acceptable values. The load
currents measured are checked against the current carrying capacity of cable/motor after applying
applicable rating/de-rating factors to identify overload condition.
This section consists of various published reference materials that could be beneficial to the client in the
area of electrical safety. The plant electrical single line diagram and the key electrical equipment lay out
diagram may also be attached in this section for future ready reference.
This is an important section, which is used to highlight electrical hazards identified in the plant. The
permission to photograph plant sections is taken in the pre-audit meeting. Generally, auditing agencies
maintain confidentiality of the safety audit report as well as the photographs.
Once the photograph is attached in the report with the relevant caption, management appreciates the
hazard in a better manner than when it is expressed in text form.
P.G. Sreejith
Manager, Cholamandalam MS Risk Services Ltd.
Chennai, INDIA
Pillai_sreejith@hotmail.com