Western Power fined over injuries to line worker

Gavel and bag of money on scale (pelican point)
Image: Shutterstock

Energy network operator Western Power has been fined $66,000 after an employee received severe electrical burns while using unsafe cleaning equipment near live high-voltage power lines.

The network operator was also ordered to pay costs of $2,616.30 following its earlier guilty plea for breaching WA’s electricity network safety laws.

Related article: Western Power fined for electric shock error

According to agreed facts presented in court, the January 2020 incident occurred at Bobalong, in the Great Southern, while the worker was cleaning insulators on Western Power’s high-voltage overhead power lines. 

When the washing stick, or wand, was near a live 22,000V conductor, an electrical discharge ran through the equipment and the worker’s left hand, arm and shoulder. The resulting severe burns required specialist treatment at Fiona Stanley Hospital.

An investigation by the State’s electrical safety regulator, Building and Energy, found the wand provided to the employee did not comply with the required standards for washing sticks used near live electricity.

Following the preliminary findings of the investigation, WA’s Director of Energy Safety issued an order reminding all service providers and network operators about the type of live-line washing equipment that is permissible for use, as well as precautions they must take for such activity. 

The standards require live-work sticks to have insulating rods or foam-filled tubes made from fibreglass-reinforced plastic insulation. The court was told that the live-work stick provided to the worker was hollow and had an aluminium rod, which failed to protect against the electrical discharge. The stick was also overdue for mandatory testing.

Western Power breached the Electricity (Network Safety) Regulations 2015 by failing to ensure, so far as reasonably practicable, that a prescribed activity on its network was carried out safely.

Related article: TCS selected as strategic partner by Western Power

Magistrate Stephen Hall said the most significant factor in the case was Western Power’s failure to provide a compliant and appropriately tested washing stick.

His Honour said workers should be able to trust that their workplace will provide equipment that is safe and complies with relevant standards. He added that Western Power should have had procedures to ensure the required testing was carried out.

Previous articleAustralia announces bid to host COP31 in 2026
Next articleUN Secretary General: “We’re on a highway to climate hell”