Every May, National Electrical Safety Month arrives as a signal: electrical risks remain one of the most serious and persistent threats in industrial workplaces. It is a month worth attention, not just because it appears on a safety calendar. The data on electrical injuries and fatalities in industrial sites is a story that facilities managers, EHS professionals, and operations leaders cannot ignore.
Between 2011 and 2024, there were 2,070 workplace fatalities involving electricity in the United States, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Notably, 70% of those fatalities occurred in non-electrical occupations. Most workers killed by electrical risks were not electricians. They were maintenance workers, material handlers, production staff, and others encountering energized equipment while on the job. This pattern immediately affects industrial facilities. Electrical protection cannot be limited to job titles containing ‘electrical.’
The Hazards That Show Up Most in Manufacturing
In industrial facilities, three types of electrical risks cause most incidents. These are electric shock from contact with energized parts, arc flash, and failures in Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) procedures. LOTO failures allow equipment to become unexpectedly energized during maintenance or servicing.
Arc flash is among the most severe. An arc flash event can reach temperatures of 35,000 degrees Fahrenheit. It can also generate blast pressures strong enough to throw a worker across a room. These events are not limited to high-voltage environments. The 2024 edition of NFPA 70E clarified that even 120V circuits can pose arc-flash hazards under certain conditions. These include high available fault current and slow-clearing times. This finding challenges the assumption that lower-voltage systems are inherently safe.
LOTO failures are equally serious and alarmingly common in manufacturing. From 2022 to 2023, LOTO violations increased by 29%, from 1,368 citations across 2,532 inspections. This generated over $20 million in penalties. The manufacturing sector carries much of this burden. Food manufacturing, fabricated metal products, and plastics and rubber products lead in citation counts. In these industries, electrical work is not the primary activity. Instead, workers interact with energized equipment during daily operations. LOTO gaps expose them every shift.





