Canadian Electrical Code, Part I, Safety Standard for Electrical Installations
Scope:
The object of this Code is to establish safety standards for the installation and maintenance of electrical equipment. In its preparation, consideration has been given to the prevention of fire and shock hazards,as well as proper maintenance and operation.
The requirements in this Code address the fundamental principles of protection for safety contained in International Electrotechnical Commission Standard 60364-1, Low-voltage electrical installations. IEC 60364-1 contains fundamental principles of protection for safety that encompass protection against electric shock, thermal effects, overcurrent, fault currents, and overvoltage. Therefore, compliance with
the requirements of this Code and proper maintenance will ensure an essentially safe installation. Safe installations may be also achieved by alternatives to this Code when such alternatives meet the fundamental safety principles of IEC 60364-1.
These alternatives are intended to be used only in conjunction with acceptable means to assess compliance of these alternatives with the fundamental safety principles of IEC 60364-1 by the authorities enforcing this Code.
Wiring installations that do not make provision for the increasing use of electricity may be overloaded in the future, resulting in a hazardous condition. It is recommended that the initial installation have sufficient wiring capacity and that there be some provision made for wiring changes that might be required as a result of future load growth.
This Code is not intended as a design specification nor as an instruction manual for untrained persons.
This Code applies to all electrical work and electrical equipment operating or intended to operate at all voltages in electrical installations for buildings, structures, and premises, including factory-built relocatable and non-relocatable structures, and self-propelled marine vessels stationary for periods exceeding five months and connected to a shore supply of electricity continuously or from time to time,
with the following exceptions:
a) installations or equipment employed by an electric, communication, or community antenna distribution system utility in the exercise of its function as a utility, as recognized by the regulatory authority having jurisdiction, and located outdoors or in buildings or sections of buildings used for that purpose;
b) equipment and facilities that are used in the operation of an electric railway and are supplied exclusively from circuits that supply the motive power;
c) installations or equipment used for railway signalling and railway communication purposes, and located outdoors or in buildings or sections of buildings used exclusively for such installations;
d) aircraft; and
e) electrical systems in ships that are regulated under Transport Canada.
For mines and quarry applications, see also CSA M421.
This Code and any standards referenced in it do not make or imply any assurance or guarantee by the authority adopting this Code with respect to life expectancy, durability, or operating performance of equipment and materials so referenced.
Project need:
Project Need:
A new edition of the Code is needed to maintain and improve electrical safety by
- Addressing safety issues brought forward by stakeholders, including coroners and regulatory authorities
- Recognizing new electrical equipment, systems, and technologies
- Adding installation requirements for new wiring methods, systems, and equipment
- Incorporating clarifications and improving consistency
- Coordinating and correlating with new and revised electrical equipment standards developed or adopted by accredited Canadian Standards Development Organizations such as the CE Code, Part II series and the CE Code, Part III series
- Deleting requirements that are no longer required
- Considering regulatory authority deviations for incorporation into the National Code
- Maintaining Appendix C procedural Rules for CE Code operations and process, and modifying where needed to reflect changes in any applicable SDP requirements
- Maintaining correlation with related standards such as the National Building Code of Canada, CSA C282, CSA Z32, NFPA 70, NFPA 20, CSA C22.1, etc.
Note: The information provided above was obtained by the Standards Council of Canada (SCC) and is provided as part of a centralized, transparent notification system for new standards development. The system allows SCC-accredited Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), and members of the public, to be informed of new work in Canadian standards development, and allows SCC-accredited SDOs to identify and resolve potential duplication of standards and effort.
Individual SDOs are responsible for the content and accuracy of the information presented here. The text is presented in the language in which it was provided to SCC.