Power and Electrical
Power and Electrical safety
Electrical hazards are common on dairy farms because electrical equipment is often used in hostile operating environments (where there is moisture, vibration, dust,
heat, corrosive chemicals or physical damage) and because power lines are likely to be located near busy dairy and feed storage areas.
Electrocution often results in death or serious injury.
Electric shocks may also lead to injuries or illnesses such as falls (e.g. from ladders or platforms), muscle spasms, palpitations, nausea, vomiting, collapse and unconsciousness.
Arcing, explosion or fire due to electric faults can cause burns and illness or death from release of toxic gases.
Regulations require employers to manage electrical risks by ensuring all electrical installation and equipment is safe to use. Even if contractors or workers supply their own electrical equipment, the dairy farm manager has a responsibility to ensure that it is safe.
Use the resources below to ensure that you comply with these requirements.
Where possible, use battery operated rather than power tools such as drills and grinders.
Welders and angle grinders often suffer damaged cables and plugs and extension leads. Nicks, splits, burns and pulling away of insulation near plugs all potentially expose live wire.
Always inspect these before use and ensure they have a current test tag.
Consider all the places where power is supplied and used on your farm. Your focus will most likely be around the dairy and workshop, but other powered locations such as yards, sheds, pumps and houses should be considered too.
A good place to start is Step by step – Safety for power and electrical equipment on your farm
Resources
The Farm Safety Manual aims to make it straightforward for dairy farmers to build and improve a comprehensive farm safety system.
Resources | Format |
Farm Safety Manual – Power and Electrical | Word |
Further information | Format |
Look up and Live (SafeWork SA) – A5 card | |
Electrical safety – Managing risks (Safe Work Australia) | Website |
Electrical safety (WorkSafe Victoria) |
|
Using electricity safely (Energy Safe Victoria) |
Website |
General guide for working in the vicinity of overhead and underground electric lines (Safe Work Australia) | Website |
Working safely near overhead and and underground power lines (WorkSafe Tasmania) | Website |
Electrical Awareness for Rural Workers (12 mins) | Video |
Dial before you dig | Website |
In This Module
- Farm Safety Manual
- Getting started
- Quads and Motorbikes
- Farm Vehicles
- Tractors and Mobile Plant
- Fixed Plant
- Contractors
- Confined Spaces
- Working at Heights
- Power and Electrical
- Manual Handlng
- Working with Livestock
- Farm Chemicals
- Water and Effluent
- Working Environment
- Visitors, Children and Traffic
- Dairy Safely, Home Safely (main menu)