News

Standards updates, remote delivery, vlogs, onshore vs offshore series, EEHA myth-busting, Ex e practicalities, partnerships, and adoption notes for AS/NZS and IEC hazardous area standards.

24 news articles published

Best Safety Boots of 2022

To wrap up another year of safety, here at Extend Training we thought we’d review the best safety boots of 2022. Taking into account comfort, safety features and of course style, these are our top picks…

Hazardous Area Classification and Design Competencies (HAC and HAD)

TRAINING PACKAGE ENDORSEMENTS Skills Ministers have endorsed the latest releases of the Maritime, Transport and Logistics (Rail), Defence and Electrotechnology Training Packages. Qualifications contained in these packages have been reviewed and developed to align to changing work practices, new technologies and regu…

VLOG 4 – Competency Schemes

Hi there! Welcome back to Extend Training’s blog series on hazard areas. For this instalment we’re going to have a quick look at some of the other competency schemes that exist around the world for demonstrating competency for hazardous area electrical work. In Australia we are most familiar with ASNZS4761 and the U…

VLOG 3 – Barrier Glands

Hi there. A big welcome back to all the Haz Area masochists out there. I know you’re excited to hear our rant about compound barrier glands, so I’ll get right to it. In our experience there is a common misconception about the reasons for using barrier glands in an installation. Lots of people associate them…

VLOG 2 – Myth Busting Legislation Requirements

Hi there, and welcome to our follow up vlog on the difference between competency and licensing. As promised, we’ll be slaying the sacred cow that says a person must always hold an Australian electrical licence to work on hazardous area electrical equipment in this country. Let’s start by saying that we’re not comple…

VLOG 1

Hi and welcome to Extend Training’s video blog series on hazardous area issues. I can’t help but wonder sometimes if the inventors of the internet would have gone ahead with it if they knew what it would be used for, but here we are in 2017 and I don’t own a cat, so we’re reduced…

EX e TERMINAL BOX PRACTICALITIES PART 2

We’ve had a great response to our blog post, “Ex e Terminal Box Practicalities,” including some good questions that we thought it would be worth addressing in a follow up post. Steve, a senior electrical engineer working in refrigeration dropped us a line to ask about spare terminals. Steve writes: “I read your arti…

ONSHORE VS OFFSHORE WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: INSTALLATION PRACTICES

Standards drive a lot of the differences between onshore and offshore installations, but some things are simply down to preferences, or established industry practices. Some of the biggest noticeable differences with offshore installations are: 1. Cables – braided armour is more common, low-smoke, zero-halogen (LSZH)…

ONSHORE VS OFFSHORE WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: QUALIFICATIONS

If you want to get into the offshore game, you will almost certainly need to hold a dual electrical/instrumentation trade. Accommodation is limited on offshore facilities so electrical personnel are expected to also handle instrumentation. You’ll need some maintenance experience in your CV too – not just constructio…

ONSHORE VS OFFSHORE WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: STANDARDS

Onshore it is likely that AS/NZS 3000 will apply, often together with other industry-specific standards such as the AS/NZS 3007 series. Even if the legislation that applies allows some freedom for the facility owner to nominate different standards to control electrical risk, it is rare that that will do so. Australi…

Onshore vs Offshore what you need to know: Legislation

The legislation covering the Australian offshore industry is a Commonwealth (federal) Act: The Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Safety Act (OPGGSA). That means the law is the same whether you are in Bass Strait, the North West Shelf or anywhere else in Australian waters. The industry regulator is the National O…

MYTH 5: Refresher training is required every 2 years.

MYTH 5: Refresher training is required every 2 years. False! This may come as a surprise, but there is actually no specified interval requirement when it comes to ‘refresher training.’ Did you know that the AS/NZS/IEC 60079.14 only states that “appropriate continuing education or training shall be undertaken by pers…

Extend Training and Trainor Korea Partnership

Extend Training and our partner Bureau Veritas Korea are pleased to announce a new partnership agreement with Trainor Korea. This new partnership will allow our customers to access training and assessment services for both IECEx CoPC and EEHA Competencies to AS/NZS 4761 in an efficient and cost-effective way. Under …

More disquiet about IEC 60079.14 Ed 5.0

In our previous blog post on changes to IEC 60079.14, we noted that the EEMUA had expressed some serious misgivings about the new criteria for determining whether a compound barrier gland was required on Ex d cable entries. And it seems that they are not alone – the UK Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has…

Ex e Terminal Box Practicalities

Ex e Terminal Box Practicalities One of the EEHA areas in which we have noted a tendency towards what we’ll refer to as “over-compliance,” in recent times, is in the verification that power dissipation inside Ex e terminal boxes is within allowable limits. Don’t get us wrong, we’re all about compliance and documenta…

We’ll be training in Perth in 2016!

We’re excited to announce that we’ll be offering courses in Perth in the new year! We’ve formed a partnership with the nice folks at ERGT Australia to use their awesome training facility at Jandakot, which is perfect for running our practical sessions with maximum realism. ERGT Australia’s purpose is to provide acce…

The next AS/NZS 60079.14 – Where are we headed?

The next AS/NZS 60079.14 – Where are we headed?

Edition 5.0 of IEC 60079.14, the text that governs our working lives here at Extend Training, was published by the IEC almost two years ago now. The committee process to adopt the IEC text as an AS/NZS standard typically takes around that long, so it’s quite likely that there will be a new AS/NZS 60079.14…