NFPA 70E Introduction
NFPA 70E is the “Standard for Electrical Safety in the Workplace®.” It establishes safe practices for protecting workers from two major electrical dangers, electric shock and arc flash. This course provides an introduction to NFPA 70E and summarizes some of its important electrical safety guidelines, including information on safety program components, risk assessment, risk control hierarchy, safety boundaries and some requirements for electrical equipment and devices. It also introduces PPE categories and incident energy analysis methods for determining personal protective equipment requirements.





Demos + Pricing
Learn more about our courses, get pricing, and see our platform.
Course Details
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, you will be able to:
- Explain why NFPA 70E® was created
- Define electric shock and arc flash
- List typical main components of an employer Electrical Safety Program
- State who is responsible for the various aspects of a “”lockout/tagout”” program
- Recall safety boundaries around electrical equipment
- Describe requirements for choosing the appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE)
- Recall equipment types with their corresponding NFPA 70E® requirement
Specs
Frequently Asked Questions
What is NFPA 70E?
What are key electrical hazards?
What is electric shock?
What is arc flash?
What are the two electric shock hazard boundaries
What is the arc flash protection boundary?
What is incident energy?
What are ways to determine when and what arc-rated PPE is required?
What is arc-rated PPE?
What is an electrical safety program?
What is a “qualified person?”
Sample Video Transcript
The National Fire Protection Association known as the NFPA created the 70E standard. NFPA 70E is the standard for electrical safety in the workplace. It is a guide for establishing safe practices for working with or near the electrical equipment. Before NFPA 70E, the National Electrical Code created standards for installing electrical equipment but did not discuss working with that equipment. The US Occupational Safety and Health Administration known as OSHA also has standards and booklets on electrical safety that are based on NFPA 70 and NFPA 70E. NFPA 70E is updated every three years because the types of equipment and known best practices can change over time. This module will provide an introduction to NFPA 70E and will summarize some of its important safety guidelines.