Electrical contact remains one of the top five causes of workplace death in Australian construction, with incidents often resulting from work on or near energised installations without adequate isolation. The WHS Regulation 2025 classifies work on or near energised electrical installations as high risk construction work requiring a SWMS. This template covers lock-out tag-out procedures, test-for-dead protocols, arc flash protection, and underground cable identification mapped to the binding Electrical Risks Code of Practice effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 4.4 — High Risk Construction Work
Work on or near energised electrical installations
Managing Electrical Risks in the Workplace (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — effective 1 July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.
Electrical licence required per state electrical safety legislation
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Electrocution from direct contact with live conductors | Death, cardiac arrest, severe burns | Possible |
| Arc flash from short circuit or switching fault | Fatal burns, blast injuries, blindness | Unlikely |
| Stored energy discharge from capacitors, batteries, or UPS systems | Electrocution, burns | Possible |
| Underground or in-wall cable strike during drilling, cutting, or excavation | Electrocution, explosion, fire | Possible |
| Inadvertent re-energisation during maintenance or modification | Electrocution of isolated worker | Possible |
Worker exposed to fall risk during overhead cable installation. Inadequate planning for work at height during electrical installation, no fall protection provided.
2024 — SafeWork NSW v TQM Design & Build Pty Ltd [2024]
Our WHS consultants develop electrical SWMS with LOTO procedures and arc flash assessments that satisfy regulator expectations and electrical safety legislation.
Contact Us