Electrical Incident Investigation

The NFPA 70E requires that electrical incidents be investigated but the standard has not developed guidelines that direct electrical incident investigations. There are, however, several papers published on the topic and this webinar uses these resources to establish guidelines that could be used until the NFPA 70E standard provides more direction.

During this webinar, we focus on a type of investigator bias that creates “tunnel vision,” that could limit exploring all root causes of an electrical incident. Due to that tunnel vision, the investigation may pursue the “people element” (safety/operations investigators) or the “equipment element” (engineering/maintenance investigators) instead of maintaining a broad (and all-encompassing) field of view. This webinar explains the importance of assembling a multidisciplinary investigation team and establishing systems to understand what requires investigations. Finally, we offer suggestions on practical ways to navigate the limitations of time, people resources, and the cost to investigate. The intent is to build a series of future webinars on this topic that develop guidelines on electrical forensics, recommendations and corrective actions, training, and auditing.

Speaker:

Zarheer Jooma, P.E., IEEE (SM’17)
Zarheer Jooma is a professional engineer and partner at e-Hazard. He holds a master’s degree (cum-laude) in electrical engineering, is a senior member of the IEEE, has convened and chaired arc flash safety standards, and is a member of both ASTM F18 and IEC TC-78. Zarheer performs electrical network design, arc flash studies, electrical safety training, incident investigations, and auditing. He has published several peer-reviewed papers on Electrical Safety, spoke at numerous conferences both locally and internationally, contributed to wording on the NFPA70E standard, and is actively engaged as a subject matter expert on the IEEE1584 suite of standards. He is the technical paper review chair for two of the IEEE journals and chair for the IEEE Electrical Safety Workshop 2025.

Sponsors:

KPA is a leading provider of EHS software and services for mid-sized businesses. KPA solutions enable clients to identify, remedy, and prevent workplace safety and compliance problems across their enterprise. The combination of KPA’s EHS software, consulting, and award-winning training content helps organizations minimize risk so they can focus on what's important—their core business. Learn more at www.kpa.io

Honeywell Salisbury
Electrocution is one of the most common hazards across construction sites, but it also puts workers in danger in transportation, utilities or welding environments.
Honeywell Salisbury has been keeping workers safe on the job for over a century. Our premium quality electrical safety tools and clothing save lives by enabling workers to operate safely in hazardous conditions. https://sps.honeywell.com

Chicago Protective Apparel, a division of Mechanix Wear, has been designing work safety apparel for over 100 years, covering industries such as foundry, electrical/utilities, manufacturing, and more.  Key products include the lightweight PPE Cat 4 Arc Flash suit with integrated Pyrad by Gore-Tex Labs and Premium 40 cal/cm2 Arc Flash Hood https://b2b.mechanix.com/

Zappos at Work knows how to keep your team safe by providing workwear and footwear programs, built custom to your business. We offer an unrivaled selection of brands and styles to ensure that your employees look and feel great on the job. You tell us your teams’ safety workwear needs, and we build a custom online storefront where your employees can order products from your hand-picked assortment. Orders are shipped directly to your employees, with free and fast shipping, returns, and exchanges on all orders. https://www.zappos.com/zappos-at-work

 

 

Duration: 1 Hour


Your e-mail address is used to communicate with you about your registration, related products and services, and offers from select vendors. Refer to our Privacy Policy for additional information.