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Living and Working Safely Around High-Voltage Power Lines.
Author(s) -
United States. Bonneville Power Administration.
Publication year - 2001
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/291040
Subject(s) - electrical engineering , voltage , electric power transmission , electrical conductor , high voltage , power (physics) , electric power , power transmission , footprint , tower , transmission (telecommunications) , environmental science , engineering , physics , geology , civil engineering , quantum mechanics , paleontology
High-voltage transmission lines can be just as safe as the electrical wiring in the homes--or just as dangerous. The crucial factor is ourselves: they must learn to behave safely around them. This booklet is a basic safety guide for those who live and work around power lines. It deals primarily with nuisance shocks due to induced voltages, and with potential electric shock hazards from contact with high-voltage lines. References on possible long-term biological effects of transmission lines are shown. In preparing this booklet, the Bonneville Power Administration has drawn on more than 50 years of experience with high-voltage transmission. BPA operates one of the world`s largest networks of long-distance, high-voltage lines. This system has more than 400 substations and about 15,000 miles of transmission lines, almost 4,400 miles of which are operated at 500,000 volts

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