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Breck  
#1 Posted : 11 August 2013 14:43:04(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Breck

Hi My name is William HSE Advisor. Offshore Wind project. .After doing research and unearthing many conflicting opinions on procedure , safe working distance criteria for working on wind farm offshore ,can anyone shed some definitive guidance on this? That is ,when should the field / tower be restricted during the presence of electrical storms in the distance. I have 20 miles then 25 & even 30 miles away then restrict activities. As the project is in Germany I have no assistance or / site rules laid out by client. Hope some when with some practical experience in this are can help. Regards William
Safety Man 1  
#2 Posted : 11 August 2013 18:58:41(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Safety Man 1

Breck I work on an electrical substation at the present moment if there is any electrical storms such as thunder as a precautionary measure all works are prohibited before any lighting can stike
Canopener  
#3 Posted : 11 August 2013 20:34:18(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Canopener

I personally don't know, but the Health and Safety Executive do have both offshore and renewables departments who I would like to think might be able to advise.
teh_boy  
#4 Posted : 12 August 2013 10:20:19(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
teh_boy

I have no idea but this is surely linked to individual design and will be a question for the design engineer to answer? what do they say? never rely on vague guidance, ask an engineer to work it out! I'd want to see calcs based on first principles showing why the rules were chosen
imwaldra  
#5 Posted : 13 August 2013 10:33:45(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
imwaldra

I think the 'local rules' for this issue are linked to how often lightning is a problem. Certainly I know that in Singapore, where it's common, they can have quite sophisticated local instruments on a construction site that measure build up of charge, and are used to maximise working time but still ensure people move to safe locations before lightning strikes. I've never heard of such a system here in UK where the investment wouldn't usually be seen as justified, and so the very conservative 'rules' you've mentioned would be typical.
stevedm  
#6 Posted : 13 August 2013 11:22:31(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
stevedm

stevedm  
#7 Posted : 13 August 2013 11:29:05(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
stevedm

Sorry you may already have it the above links... I think Part 4 of IEC 62305 gives guidance on distances which may help...I have some other stuff in the COMAH context buried somewhere give me a shout if I am anywhere close to helping..
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