Lockout/tagout failures are rarely caused by workers not knowing that hazardous energy is dangerous.
They happen because the system around the work breaks down.
A procedure is outdated. A stored energy source is missed. A panel label is wrong. A shift handoff is rushed. A worker assumes the equipment is fully deenergized. A supervisor prioritizes service restoration over verification. A lock is applied, but zero energy is never confirmed.
In utility operations, those gaps can be catastrophic.
Utility workers face electrical energy, mechanical energy, hydraulic pressure, pneumatic systems, steam, gravity, chemical energy, and stored energy that may remain present even after equipment appears shut down. When lockout/tagout procedures fail, the result can be electrocution, arc flash burns, crushing injuries, amputations, pressure-release injuries, or fatalities.
That is why LOTO must be treated as a life-saving system, not a paperwork step before maintenance begins.
Why LOTO Matters So Much in Utility Work
Utility operations involve complex systems that can store, transfer, or release hazardous energy in multiple ways.
Power generation, transmission, distribution, substations, metering systems, pipelines, pressure systems, valves, pumps, breakers, batteries, and mechanical equipment all create exposure if energy is not properly controlled before servicing or maintenance.
The uploaded draft explains that OSHA lockout/tagout procedures exist to prevent workers from contacting hazardous energy during equipment maintenance, yet serious injuries and fatalities continue to occur across utility operations because human error, procedural gaps, and equipment failures create dangerous conditions.
The challenge is that utility workers do not always deal with one simple energy source.
A piece of equipment may be electrically isolated but still hold hydraulic pressure. A line may be deenergized but still have induced voltage concerns. A valve may be closed but stored pressure remains downstream. A mechanical component may stop moving but remain under spring tension or gravity load.
LOTO must control all hazardous energy, not only the most obvious source.
OSHA Requirements Are Clear, but Utility Work Is Complex
Most general industry LOTO programs are built around OSHA 1910.147, the Control of Hazardous Energy standard. OSHA states that this standard covers servicing and maintenance of machines and equipment where unexpected energization, startup, or release of stored energy could injure workers.
Utility operations also involve OSHA 1910.269, which applies to electric power generation, transmission, and distribution work. The uploaded draft notes that utilities operate under a split system: power generation facilities may use hazardous energy control procedures under 1910.269(d), while transmission and distribution work has specific locking and tagging requirements under 1910.269(m).
This creates a practical challenge for safety managers.
A procedure that is acceptable for one utility environment may not automatically satisfy another. General industry LOTO procedures may not cover the unique requirements for deenergizing transmission and distribution systems. Safety teams need to know which standard applies to the work, equipment, and energy source involved.
The safest approach is to build procedures around the actual task and hazard, not around assumptions.
The Energy Sources Utility Workers Must Control
Utility LOTO programs must address more than electrical power.
The uploaded draft identifies several energy types that may be present in utility operations, including electrical, mechanical, hydraulic, pneumatic, chemical, thermal, gravitational, and stored energy.
Common hazardous energy sources include:
- Electrical energy
- Stored electrical energy
- Induced voltage
- Mechanical motion
- Hydraulic pressure
- Pneumatic pressure
- Steam pressure
- Thermal energy
- Chemical energy
- Gravity
- Springs
- Flywheels
- Elevated equipment
- Pressurized gas or liquid systems
Stored energy is especially dangerous because it may not be visible after the primary power source is shut off.
A worker may believe the equipment is safe because it is no longer running, but pressure, heat, gravity, or stored electrical charge may still remain. That is why energy must be isolated, dissipated, blocked, bled, released, restrained, and verified before work begins.




