Avoiding Contact With Power Lines, Guidance From IPAF

The International Powered Access Federation (IPAF) released new guidance outlining key principles and ways to reduce risks when using mobile elevating work platforms in the vicinity of power lines, with the aim of helping to reduce electrocution.

Tony Groat, manager of IPAF North America, relays the ins and outs of IPAF's new guidance on avoiding contact with power lines.
Tony Groat, manager of IPAF North America, relays the ins and outs of IPAF's new guidance on avoiding contact with power lines.
IPAF

The International Powered Access Federation (IPAF) released comprehensive new guidance outlining key principles and ways to reduce risks when using mobile elevating work platforms (MEWPs) in the vicinity of power lines, with the aim of helping to reduce electrocution and electric shock incidents.

The guidance is part of IPAF's High Voltage! targeted global safety campaign, at the Conexpo event in Las Vegas, U.S.

“By analyzing data from the past ten years of accident reporting via IPAF’s portal, it’s evident that incidents involving electrocutions and electric shocks have notably increased since 2015. One standout statistic is that reported incidents of electrocution are nearly always fatal," said Brian Parker, IPAF head of safety and technical. “Working in the vicinity of energized power lines can expose workers to health and safety risks including death by electrocution or electric shock. If a MEWP or its occupants contact energized power lines it can cause instant death, electric shock or other injuries caused directly or indirectly by electricity. Equally serious can be the effect of electricity arcing from the power line to a MEWP and its occupants."

The new guidance document, entitled Safe Use of MEWPs in the Vicinity of Power Lines, has been developed by IPAF in collaboration with the IPAF International Safety Committee and supporting members and is available to view or download initially in English. After being launched officially at CONEXPO, and following industry review and consideration of any feedback, the document will be made available in other languages and region-specific versions.

The document can be viewed and downloaded free of charge in digital format and is also available print-ready, allowing organizations to produce co-branded hard copies as required. 

“As with all common causes of accidents involving MEWPs, workplace safety culture and behavior can play a big part in reducing the number of incidents. Ignorance or lack of awareness of the main underlying risks can lead to complacency and potential exposure to unsafe situations. It was clear that this is another of those all-too-common type of incident that our industry should be doing much more to understand and eradicate, which nearly always result in serious, life-changing injury or death," Parker said. “IPAF has prepared a brand new, comprehensive guidance document, which we hope will assist all those planning, operating and supervising the use MEWPs in the vicinity of power lines in identifying and understanding the risks. The guide outlines measures that can reduce or mitigate these and in turn reduce the occurrence of incidents involving contact with or arcing from power lines.”

IPAF’s Safe Use of MEWPs in the Vicinity of Power Lines guidance aims to:

  • Provide information for those who plan and manage MEWP operations.
  • Provide information on the main causes of electrocutions with power lines.
  • Raise awareness to the hazards and risks in working in close proximity to power lines.
  • Provide information on the industry sectors where electrocutions and electric shocks occur.
  • Identify risk control measures and Safe System of Work (SSoW) to implement and reduce the number of incidents occurring.
  • Provide general global guidance for those who undertake tasks to prevent incidents occurring.

Key points highlighted in the document include:

  • Plan thoroughly: Look out and around for power lines in the work area. Conduct a site survey and risk assessment ensuring an SSoW is completed. Correct machine selection is critical. If power lines are in your work area contact the Energy Supply Authority (ESA) before work commences. Ensure operators are briefed prior to work commencing and that they are made aware of any power lines in the vicinity.
  • Ensure operators are trained: Anyone involved in the safe use of MEWPs must be properly trained on the type of MEWP they are using and must receive machine-specific familiarization. Managers must ensure MEWP operators, supervisors and spotters are briefed on the SSoW.
  • Stay outside exclusion zones: An exclusion zone is the prescribed safety envelope around live electric power lines. You must not operate a MEWP where there is potential for any part of it to enter an exclusion zone. Distances for exclusion zones can vary; these must be obtained from the relevant ESA.
  • Know your rescue plan: If someone has been electrocuted by arcing of electricity or has been in contact with a power line, call the emergency services immediately and call the ESA to have the power turned off and the lines isolated. Observe the Stay, Call, Wait protocol.

Visit www.ipaf.org/resources to view or download the new IPAF Safe Use of MEWPs in the Vicinity of Power Lines guidance document. For more information about High Voltage! as well as Don’t Fall For It! and all of IPAF’s targeted safety campaigns see www.ipaf.org/safe and continue to use www.ipafaccidentreporting.org to report incidents and near misses involving powered access.


Latest