Power industry portable earthing and bonding is not the same on railways
If you’ve spent years in the power utility world, portable earthing probably feels like second nature. Isolate the circuit, test for dead, apply earths, and get on with the job. The gear is reassuringly solid, the logic is clear, and the rules are well proven.
Step into the rail industry, though, and that same gear suddenly comes with a very different instruction manual. Portable earthing still exists, but the way it’s used — and the thinking behind it — can feel unfamiliar, even uncomfortable, for people with a utility background.
In power networks, portable earthing revolves around a simple principle: earth is your reference and your protection. Once something is earthed, it’s considered safe to touch because every exposed part is held at the same potential. If a line is accidentally re‑energised, the portable earths provide a low‑impedance path that helps protective devices operate quickly.
This approach works because utility systems are designed around it. Earth is not part of the normal operating circuit, and any current flowing into the ground is treated as abnormal. Portable earthing is temporary, local, and focused on protecting the people working on that specific piece of plant.
Railways turn that assumption on its head. In electric rail systems, the rails themselves are live electrical components. They carry return current from trains back to substations, sometimes continuously and sometimes over many kilometres. Because of this, rails are often deliberately insulated from earth to control where that current flows.
That means earth is no longer a neutral backdrop. In the rail environment, connecting something to earth can actively change how the system behaves. Current can be diverted into the ground, voltages can rise elsewhere on the network, and buried metal can start corroding much faster than anyone expected.
This is why portable earthing on railways often looks more like controlled bonding. Instead of automatically connecting rails to earth, workers may bond rails to each other or to designated return conductors. The aim is to make sure everyone and everything in the work area sits at the same electrical potential, without creating new paths to earth.
Direct rail‑to‑earth connections are usually restricted and, in many cases, need explicit engineering approval. That’s a big shift for utility veterans, where adding another earth is usually seen as a conservative and safe move.
One of the biggest risks during the transition from utilities to rail comes from well‑intentioned habits. Bridging an insulated joint “just to be safe” or adding an earth because it feels wrong not to can undermine the railway’s earthing and stray‑current controls. In rail, more copper doesn’t automatically mean more safety.
Rail procedures are also more system‑aware. Decisions about portable earthing may consider signalling, corrosion risk, and how currents redistribute across the wider network, not just what’s happening at the worksite.
Both industries use portable earthing to protect people. The difference lies in how they get there. Utilities eliminate risk by tying everything back to earth. Railways manage risk by being selective, deliberate, and sometimes cautious about using earth at all.
For power industry professionals new to rail, understanding this difference early is crucial. The tools may look familiar, but the rules of the game have changed — and once you grasp why, the rail approach starts to make a lot more sense.