Geomechanics.io

  • Free Tools
Sign UpLog In

Geomechanics.io

Geomechanics, Streamlined.

© 2026 Geomechanics.io. All rights reserved.

Geomechanics.io

CMRR-ioGEODB-ioHYDROGEO-ioQCDB-ioFree Tools & CalculatorsBlogLatest Industry News

Industries

MiningConstructionTunnelling

Company

Terms of UsePrivacy PolicyLinkedIn
    AllGeotechnicalMiningInfrastructureMaterialsHazardsEnvironmentalSoftwarePolicy
    Safety

    Hunterston B cabling incident at EDF: electrical safety lessons for engineers

    February 26, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Hunterston B cabling incident at EDF: electrical safety lessons for engineers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    EDF Energy has been served an improvement notice by the Office for Nuclear Regulation after 415V electrical cabling was deployed unsafely during work on cooling water valves at the Hunterston B nuclear power station in Ayrshire in November 2025, creating a significant potential risk to workers. The notice compels EDF to review, revise and implement arrangements for the construction, maintenance, testing and control of all 415V portable equipment, and to strengthen risk assessments and procedures for electrical work. Compliance is required by 20 March 2026 under Section 2 of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and multiple Electricity at Work Regulations, including Regulations 4, 7, 10 and 14.

    Technical Brief

    • Incident involved 415V portable electrical equipment used around cooling water valve works at Hunterston B.
    • ONR judged cabling deployment as unsafe specifically during valve maintenance in one of the station’s facilities.
    • No physical injuries occurred, but ONR assessed the potential for serious harm as “significant”.
    • Improvement notice explicitly targets construction, maintenance, testing and control arrangements for all 415V portable kit on site.
    • EDF must upgrade arrangements for personnel competence and procedures when undertaking electrical work at Hunterston B.
    • Legal basis combines Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 s.2 with Electricity at Work Regulations 1989.
    • Electricity at Work focus spans systems and PPE (Reg 4), insulation/segregation (Reg 7), terminations (Reg 10) and live-working controls (Reg 14).

    Our Take

    Hunterston B sits within the United Kingdom’s mature nuclear fleet, and in our infrastructure safety coverage ONR interventions at legacy plants often trigger wider reviews of portable and temporary electrical equipment standards across an operator’s entire estate, not just the named site.

    The explicit linkage to the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act and the 1989 Electricity at Work Regulations suggests EDF Energy may need to tighten its corporate-level electrical isolation and inspection regimes for 415 V tools and leads, which can have knock-on implications for contractors’ method statements and permit-to-work systems on other UK assets.

    Among the 436 safety-tagged infrastructure pieces in our database, formal improvement notices with a fixed compliance date like the 20 March 2026 deadline typically precede more intrusive regulatory action only where operators miss milestones, so EDF’s response at Hunterston B will be watched as a bellwether for ONR’s enforcement stance at other decommissioning-era nuclear sites.

    Geotechnical Software for Modern Teams

    Centralise site data, logs, and lab results with GEODB-io, CMRR-io, and HYDROGEO-io.

    No credit card required.

    • Save and export unlimited calculations
    • Advanced data visualisation
    • Generate professional PDF reports
    • Cloud storage for all your projects

    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

    Related Articles

    National Grid TBM under the Thames: tunnelling design and risk notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    in 8 months

    National Grid TBM under the Thames: tunnelling design and risk notes for engineers

    A 271.5‑tonne Herrenknecht Mixshield TBM, Caroline, has started driving a 2.2km electricity cable tunnel with a 4m internal diameter beneath the River Thames in Essex for National Grid’s Grain to Tilbury project, delivered by the Ferrovial BEMO joint venture. The drive will pass through variable Thames estuary ground conditions between 35m‑deep launch and reception shafts of 15m and 12m diameter, with tunnelling continuing into 2026 and overall scheme completion targeted for 2029. The new tunnel will replace the 1969 Thames Cable Tunnel and carry new high‑voltage circuits between Grain and Tilbury substations.

    Panama Canal Mixshield undercrossing: design and tunnelling lessons for engineers
    Infrastructure
    in 8 months

    Panama Canal Mixshield undercrossing: design and tunnelling lessons for engineers

    A 13.46m diameter Herrenknecht Mixshield TBM has broken through into the future Balboa station on Panama Metro Line 3 after completing the first-ever TBM undercrossing of the Panama Canal at depths exceeding 60m below sea level. The 5,600kW, 26,616kNm machine, fitted with an accessible cutterhead and more than 4,500 sensors linked via the Herrenknecht.Connected platform, has achieved peak advance of 150 segment rings (about 300m) per month through mixed sandstone, tuff, breccias and basalt. Around 1.5km of the 4.5km twin-track tunnel remains to final breakthrough.

    Hudson Tunnel funding deadline: schedule and risk takeaways for project teams
    Infrastructure
    in 7 months

    Hudson Tunnel funding deadline: schedule and risk takeaways for project teams

    Federal funding for New York’s US$16bn Hudson Tunnel Project has been frozen, forcing the Gateway Development Commission to suspend works from 6 February after spending over US$1bn and employing about 1,000 site workers. A Manhattan federal judge has issued a temporary restraining order, giving the administration until 5 p.m. on 12 February to restore reimbursements or appeal, while contractors warn that demobilisation, resequencing and remobilisation will add cost and delay. Sites are now in “safe-pause” mode, with dewatering, ground support and environmental monitoring maintained, and assembly of two Herrenknecht TBMs in New Jersey likely to slip beyond the planned spring 2026 launch without funding certainty.

    Related Industries & Products

    Construction

    Quality control software for construction companies with material testing, batch tracking, and compliance management.

    Mining

    Geotechnical software solutions for mining operations including CMRR analysis, hydrogeological testing, and data management.

    QCDB-io

    Comprehensive quality control database for manufacturing, tunnelling, and civil construction with UCS testing, PSD analysis, and grout mix design management.