In electrical engineering for industrial, commercial, and residential power systems, earthing (grounding) is not an optional accessory but a mandatory safety foundation. Simply put, earthing creates a safe, low-resistance path between electrical equipment and the earth to protect people, equipment, and system stability.
It covers two core application scenarios: protective earthing for switchboards and functional earthing supported by earthing switches in switchgear. Below we explain its key purposes in detail, with practical standards and application guidance for power equipment.
1. Protect Personnel from Electric Shock
The most critical purpose of earthing is to prevent electric shock. All non-current-carrying metal parts of electrical equipment—such as switchboard cabinets, frames, doors, and mounting plates—carry risk when insulation fails. Without earthing, fault voltage remains on metal surfaces, causing fatal injury to operators.
By connecting these metal parts to an earth electrode, fault current is safely discharged into the ground. This keeps touch voltage within safe limits and complies with IEC and NEC requirements. For step-by-step safe installation, you can refer to our complete guide: How to Do Earthing in Switchboard.
2. Divert Fault Current and Avoid Equipment Damage
When short circuits, lightning surges, or overvoltage occur, earthing provides a dedicated path for abnormal current. It prevents current from damaging cables, circuit breakers, MCCBs, MCBs, and connected devices.
Effective earthing ensures fault current is quickly directed away, so sensitive parts avoid burnout. This directly extends the service life of switchgear and distribution boards, reducing maintenance costs and unplanned downtime.
3. Stabilize System Voltage and Improve Power Quality
Earthing supports voltage stability, especially in three-phase power systems. System earthing (neutral earthing) balances phase voltage, prevents drift, and reduces waveform distortion. Stable voltage protects motors, drives, instruments, and automation components from unstable power supply damage.
This function is vital in medium‑voltage and high‑voltage systems, where voltage fluctuation can cause large‑scale equipment failure.
4. Ensure Protective Devices Operate Correctly
Circuit breakers, fuses, RCDs, and other protection devices rely on proper earthing to trigger quickly during faults. If earthing resistance is too high or connections are loose, fault current is too weak to activate protection, leading to persistent danger, heat, fire, or larger accidents.
Standardized earthing ensures protection devices trip accurately and isolate faults in milliseconds.
5. Support Safe Maintenance with Earthing Switches
In high‑voltage and medium‑voltage switchgear, earthing serves an extended safety purpose through dedicated earthing switches. These devices discharge residual charge and induced voltage during power-off maintenance, creating a zero‑potential safe working environment.
Earthing switches also form interlocks with disconnectors and circuit breakers to prevent accidental power transmission. To learn more about their structure and functions, read: What Is the Earthing Switch in Switchgear.
6. Meet International Safety Standards and Compliance
All regions enforce strict earthing rules based on IEC, NEC, and local electrical codes. Projects without qualified earthing cannot pass inspection, and non‑compliant installations face legal risks and insurance issues.
Standard earthing includes correct electrode installation, reliable busbars, tight connections, and regular earth resistance testing.
7. Reduce Fire and Explosion Risks
Most electrical fires come from poor contact, high resistance, or arc discharge caused by ineffective earthing. Complete earthing lowers contact resistance, eliminates sparks, and stabilizes equipment temperature.
In industrial environments with flammable materials, this fire‑prevention function is especially important.
Core Purposes of Earthing
To sum up, the main purpose of earthing can be summarized in four points:
- Protect people from electric shock
- Protect equipment from overcurrent and overvoltage
- Stabilize power systems and ensure normal operation
- Meet safety standards and reduce fire and accident risks
Earthing is a complete system, not just a single cable or rod. It includes equipment earthing for switchboards, system earthing for power neutral points, and dedicated earthing switches for high‑voltage switchgear maintenance safety.
Whether you are installing a low‑voltage distribution board or operating medium‑voltage switchgear, correct earthing is the first step for safe and reliable power supply.
Professional Medium & High Voltage Electrical Equipment Manufacturer