What is Substation Earthing?
A foundational safety system for every electrical substation — and a specialist engineering discipline that Power Projects has been designing for over 25 years.
Substation earthing — also called a substation grounding system — is the network of buried copper conductors, earth rods, and bonding connections installed beneath and around an electrical substation. Its purpose is to connect every metallic structure, equipment frame, and enclosure in the substation to the surrounding earth, creating a safe and controlled path for electrical fault currents.
When a fault occurs inside a substation — for example, a phase conductor touching a transformer tank — enormous currents need somewhere to go. Without a properly designed earthing system, those currents create dangerous voltage differences across surfaces that people touch or walk on. A well-designed earth grid in the substation distributes those currents safely, keeping the voltage gradients experienced by workers and visitors within human tolerance limits.
Power Projects provides substation earthing design services for distribution and transmission substations across worldwide. We produce the calculations, specifications, and drawings that define the earthing system — ready for review, approval, and handover to the contractor for construction. Every design we issue is calculated to comply with ANSI/IEEE Std 80, the internationally recognised guide for safety in AC substation grounding.
The word earthing comes from IEC and British standard terminology. Grounding is used by IEEE and North American standards. Both describe the same practice. Similarly, earth mat, earthing mat, earth mesh, earth grid, ground grid, grounding mat, and substation grounding mat all refer to the same buried conductor network. Power Projects works to all terminology conventions — whichever your project specification requires.
Fault Current Path
The design ensures fault currents have a safe, defined path to earth — preventing uncontrolled arcing and equipment damage.
Personnel Safety
The design limits touch and step voltages in the yard and at the fence to safe, tolerable levels per IEEE Std 80.
Equipment Protection
Correct bonding design keeps transformer tanks, switchgear, and control panels at safe potentials during faults.
Relay Protection
The design ensures fault currents are sufficient to operate protection relays reliably within designed clearing times.
System Reference
Provides the stable neutral reference required by transformers, surge arresters, and protection relay systems.
Lightning Dissipation
A correctly designed earth grid dissipates high-energy impulse currents from lightning strikes on substation structures.
Reasons for a Substation Grounding System
The engineering case for a properly designed substation earthing system — and why every substation needs a site-specific design study, not a generic layout.
The reasons for a substation grounding system go far beyond regulatory compliance. A properly designed earthing system in a substation is the difference between a safe facility and one that poses a life-threatening risk to every person who enters it. A generic or copied earthing layout — one not based on actual site soil conditions and system fault levels — cannot reliably deliver this safety. This is why Power Projects always produces a full, site-specific earthing design study for every project.
Controlling Ground Potential Rise
When a ground fault occurs, the large fault current flowing into the earth through the substation earthing system raises the potential of the local earth relative to remote earth — this is called Ground Potential Rise, or GPR. If GPR is not controlled by a well-designed substation grounding system, the elevated potential can travel along metallic fences, communication cables, water pipes, and railway lines — endangering people and equipment well beyond the substation boundary. Power Projects calculates and documents GPR in every earthing design study it produces.
Protecting Personnel from Touch Voltage
Touch voltage is the potential difference a person experiences between their hand — touching a grounded metal structure like a transformer tank or switchgear frame — and their feet on the ground. If the earthing system design does not adequately distribute fault current, touch voltages can reach levels that cause ventricular fibrillation in seconds. The entire purpose of the earth mat design for substation is to reduce this gradient to a level the human body can safely tolerate for the duration of the fault.
Protecting Personnel from Step Voltage
Step voltage is the difference in surface potential between two points one metre apart — the typical stride length of a walking person. High step voltages near the perimeter of a substation can drive dangerous currents through a person's legs even when they are not touching any equipment. The earth mesh design — particularly the perimeter ring conductor and gradient control design — specifically addresses and limits step voltages to safe values at all locations in and around the substation.
Ensuring Protection Relay Operation
Protection relay systems depend on fault currents being of a certain minimum magnitude following predictable paths. If the earthing system of a substation is designed with high impedance, fault currents may be too low to operate relays quickly, extending fault duration and increasing equipment damage. A correctly designed and calculated grounding system ensures relays will always operate within their designed time windows.
Protecting Connected Infrastructure
Substations connect to the outside world through power cables, communication circuits, instrument transformer secondary wiring, and control cables. All of these pathways can carry elevated potentials outside the substation during a fault. A well-engineered earthing design — with properly specified isolation, surge protection, and cable sheath bonding — prevents dangerous potentials from propagating to remote locations, protecting both infrastructure and people.
Earth Grid Components & Terminology
What Power Projects specifies and designs in every substation earthing system — and the terminology used across different standards and regions.
You will encounter many different terms depending on which standard, country, or engineer you are speaking to. IEEE uses "grounding grid," "ground grid," and "grounding mat." British and IEC traditions use "earth mat," "earthing mat," "earth mesh," and "earth grid." Power Projects works to all terminology conventions — whichever your project specification requires. The underlying engineering is identical regardless of the terminology used.
Horizontal Grid Conductors
Bare copper or copper-clad steel conductors forming the main grid pattern of the earth mat in substation. Power Projects designs determine the required conductor cross-section based on thermal sizing for the design fault current, the grid spacing needed to achieve compliant mesh voltages, the burial depth to be specified, and the total conductor length required. Conductor sizes typically range from 70 mm² for distribution substations up to 300 mm² for large transmission substations.
Earth Rods / Ground Rods
Vertical copper-bonded rods driven into the soil at grid intersections and perimeter corners. Power Projects designs specify the required rod diameter, length, and placement to achieve the target grid resistance — particularly important on sites with high surface soil resistivity, where rods provide access to lower-resistivity deeper soil layers that significantly reduce the overall earth grid resistance.
Equipment Bonding Schedule
Every metallic structure in the substation — transformer tanks, switchgear frames, control building structures, cable sheaths, and equipment enclosures — must be connected to the earth grid. Power Projects earthing designs include a bonding schedule specifying the bonding conductor size, route, and connection method for each item of plant. Unbonded metalwork can rise to dangerous potentials during a fault even when physically adjacent to the earth grid.
Perimeter Ring Conductor
A continuous conductor forming the outer boundary of the earth grid. Power Projects designs always include a perimeter ring, specified at a depth and outward offset calculated to control surface potential gradients at the substation boundary — where step voltages are typically the highest in the entire design without this feature.
Crushed Stone Surface Layer Specification
A 100 to 150 mm layer of clean crushed rock covering the entire substation yard. In the Power Projects design process, the resistivity of the crushed stone surface layer is a formal design input — it directly determines the tolerable touch and step voltage limits used throughout the design calculations. The surface layer specification in our designs is as important as the conductor specification. Getting it right increases the tolerable voltage limits significantly and can make the difference between a compliant and a non-compliant design.
IEEE Std 80 & ANSI Standards
The engineering standard that governs every substation earthing design Power Projects produces.
ANSI/IEEE Std 80 — Guide for Safety in AC Substation Grounding
IEEE Std 80 is the globally recognised engineering standard for designing substation grounding systems. It defines how engineers must calculate safe voltage levels, size earth grid conductors, lay out the grounding grid, and verify that the completed earthing design will protect personnel from dangerous touch and step voltages during ground fault events. Power Projects applies IEEE Std 80 — in its 2000 and current 2013 editions — as the foundational design authority for all substation earthing design work.
The Evolution of IEEE Std 80
The first widely adopted edition of IEEE Std 80, published in 1986, established the foundational methodology for earth mat design and grounding grid design calculations. The landmark IEEE Std 80 2000 revision introduced more accurate soil modelling techniques — particularly the two-layer soil model — and refined the methods for computing mesh voltage and step voltage across large earthing grids. The 2013 edition added further guidance on conductor sizing, fault current split calculations, and provided additional worked examples for complex grid geometries.
In practice, IEEE Std 80 2000 remains the most widely cited edition in Indian utility specifications, tender documents, and regulatory submissions. Power Projects is fully equipped to design to IEEE Std 80 2000, the 2013 edition, or both — depending on your project requirements.
What IEEE Std 80 Requires — and What Power Projects Delivers
Design Aspect | IEEE Std 80 Requirement | Power Projects Deliverable |
|---|---|---|
Soil Model | Soil resistivity test data interpreted before design begins | Soil resistivity analysis and uniform or two-layer soil model in design report |
Fault Current | Maximum credible single-phase ground fault current used for full design life | Fault level review and design current selection documented in study report |
Tolerable Voltages | Safe touch and step voltage limits calculated for specific fault clearing time | Tolerable voltage calculations documented in earthing design study report |
Conductor Sizing | Conductors sized to withstand fault current thermally without damage | Conductor cross-section calculation and specification on design drawings |
Grid Layout | Grid geometry designed so mesh and step voltages are within limits everywhere | Optimised grid layout engineering drawings with full dimensional annotation |
Fence Grounding | Fence grounding approach analysed and external touch voltages verified | Fence grounding scheme design and external voltage verification in study report |
Design Report | Design calculations documented and available for review | Formal earthing design calculation report issued with every project |
Many substations in India have been constructed using generic earthing designs — layouts not based on the actual soil conditions, fault levels, or clearing times for that specific site. A generic design that works safely on one site may be dangerously inadequate on another where soil resistivity is different. Power Projects produces a fully site-specific earthing design calculation for every project, ensuring the design is correct for your substation — not someone else's.
Our Earthing Design Process
How Power Projects takes your substation from raw site data to a complete, IEEE Std 80 compliant earthing design package — ready for construction by your contractor.
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01
Collection of Site Data & Soil Resistivity Results
Power Projects begins every earthing design by collecting site-specific inputs — starting with the soil resistivity test results from a Wenner four-pin electrode array survey at the substation footprint. Soil resistivity is the single most important variable in the entire design. It can vary by a factor of 100 or more between sites, and a design that is correct for one soil type can be completely inadequate for another. Where soil test data is not yet available, Power Projects advises on the test specification required to ensure results are suitable for use in the design calculations.
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02
Soil Model Development
Using the Wenner test results, Power Projects develops a soil resistivity model — either a uniform single-layer model for straightforward sites, or a multi-layer model for sites where resistivity changes significantly with depth. The multi-layer soil model, introduced in IEEE Std 80 2000, produces significantly more accurate earthing grid design results than a uniform model on the majority of Indian substation sites. The soil model forms the foundation of all subsequent design calculations and is documented in the design report.
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03
Fault Level Review & Design Current Selection
Power Projects reviews the maximum single-phase-to-earth fault current and fault clearing time for the substation — either from data provided by the client or from system short-circuit studies. The fault current determines the conductor size and the ground potential rise magnitude. The clearing time determines the tolerable touch and step voltage limits. Power Projects documents the selected design values and their basis in the earthing design report.
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04
Tolerable Voltage Calculation
Using the IEEE Std 80 methodology, Power Projects calculates the maximum tolerable touch voltage and step voltage for a person working in the substation — taking into account the fault clearing time and the resistivity of the crushed stone surface layer specified for the yard. These tolerable voltage values become the acceptance criteria against which every aspect of the earthing grid design must be verified, and are fully documented in the design report.
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05
Earth Mat Design & Conductor Sizing
Power Projects develops the earth mat design — specifying conductor cross-section, grid spacing, burial depth, perimeter ring conductor details, and earth rod placement. The conductor cross-section is sized to withstand the full design fault current thermally for the fault duration without damage to the conductor or its joints. The grid spacing is optimised using a non-uniform approach — tighter at the perimeter and around major equipment, wider in the open yard areas — to maximise safety performance for the available conductor budget.
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06
Grid Resistance & Voltage Verification
Power Projects calculates the overall earth grid resistance, ground potential rise, mesh voltage, and step voltage at critical locations in the substation yard. Where calculated voltages exceed the tolerable limits, the earthing grid design is refined — reducing mesh spacing, adding earth rods, extending the grid area, or adjusting the perimeter configuration — and the calculations are repeated until the design is fully compliant with IEEE Std 80. All iterations and the final compliant result are documented in the design report.
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07
Fence Grounding Design
Power Projects designs the substation fence grounding scheme as an integral part of the earthing design package — not as an afterthought. We determine whether the fence should be bonded to the earth grid, isolated from it, or protected by gradient control conductors, and verify that touch voltages on the exterior of the fence remain within safe limits. This step is specifically required by IEEE Std 80 and is frequently omitted in generic or inadequate earthing designs.
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08
Earthing Design Report & Construction Drawings
Power Projects issues a complete earthing design package: a formal calculation report documenting all design inputs, calculations, results, and compliance verification against IEEE Std 80; and engineering drawings showing the earth grid layout, conductor routes, rod positions, bonding schedule, and fence grounding scheme. The design package is construction-ready — the contractor can procure materials and build the earthing system directly from the Power Projects design documents.
Software Used for Earthing Design
Power Projects uses a combination of manual calculations and specialist software to ensure every substation earthing design is technically robust, accurate under complex site conditions, and compliant with international standards.
The earthing system design has been carried out using both manual calculation methods and specialised software tools to ensure accuracy and full compliance with industry standards. This dual approach gives clients confidence that every design has been independently validated — not simply generated by software alone.
Manual calculations are performed in accordance with IEEE Std 80 to determine:
- ▸Step and touch voltages
- ▸Grid resistance
- ▸Conductor sizing
- ▸Fault current distribution
CDEGS is used for detailed analysis including:
- ▸Ground grid modelling
- ▸Soil resistivity modelling (multi-layer analysis)
- ▸Step and touch voltage simulation
- ▸Surface potential distribution
- ▸Fault current split and grid performance evaluation
Earth Mat, Earth Mesh & Earth Grid Design
The core engineering decisions Power Projects makes in designing the buried conductor network at the heart of every substation earthing system.
The terms earth mat for substation, earthing mat in substation, earth mesh for substation, earth grid in substation, ground grid substation, and substation grounding mat all describe the same thing — the network of bare copper conductors buried beneath the substation yard. Power Projects designs this conductor network for substations at every voltage level, from compact 11 kV ring main unit substations to large 400 kV gas-insulated switchgear installations.
Conductor Material Specification
Power Projects specifies hard-drawn bare copper as the standard conductor material for the earth mat in all our designs. Copper offers the best combination of high electrical conductivity, excellent resistance to soil corrosion, and compatibility with exothermic welding — the required jointing method for buried earthing conductors. Our designs specify copper-clad steel conductors where mechanical strength is a priority alongside conductivity. Aluminium is not recommended for buried earthing applications due to its susceptibility to corrosion in most Indian soil types and is not specified in Power Projects earthing designs.
Grid Spacing Design
The spacing between conductors in the earth mat is one of the most consequential decisions in every earthing design. Smaller mesh spacing reduces the touch voltage at the centre of each mesh opening — but closer spacing increases total conductor length and therefore construction cost. Power Projects optimises the mesh spacing in every design to achieve the required safety performance at minimum conductor length — using tighter spacing near the perimeter and around major equipment, and wider spacing in the open interior where voltages are naturally lower.
A uniform grid spacing applied across the entire substation yard is conservative and often wasteful. Power Projects designs earth grids with deliberately non-uniform spacing — tighter around the perimeter ring, at the substation fence, and around transformers and circuit breakers; wider in the open yard areas away from equipment. This approach consistently delivers better step and touch voltage performance for the same total conductor length, reducing construction cost without any compromise to safety.
Burial Depth Specification
Power Projects specifies the burial depth of earth mat conductors in accordance with IEEE Std 80 guidance — typically 0.6 to 1.0 metres in our designs, depending on site conditions. Greater burial depth improves the thermal performance of conductors during fault events. Where hard rock close to the surface makes deep burial impractical, our designs incorporate compensating measures — closer grid spacing, additional earth rods, or a combination — to achieve compliant performance at the available burial depth. The specified burial depth is always stated on the Power Projects design drawings.
Indicative Design Parameters by Substation Voltage Level
Substation Voltage | Typical Fault Current | Conductor Size Range | Grid Spacing Range | Rod Depth Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
11 kV / 33 kV | 10 – 20 kA | 70 – 120 mm² | 5 – 8 m | 3 – 6 m |
66 kV / 110 kV | 16 – 25 kA | 95 – 150 mm² | 5 – 7 m | 6 – 9 m |
132 kV | 20 – 31.5 kA | 120 – 185 mm² | 4 – 6 m | 6 – 12 m |
220 kV | 31.5 – 40 kA | 150 – 240 mm² | 4 – 6 m | 9 – 15 m |
400 kV | 40 – 63 kA | 185 – 300 mm² | 3 – 5 m | 12 – 18 m |
These are indicative values only. All conductor sizes, grid spacings, and rod depths in Power Projects designs are determined by site-specific calculation per IEEE Std 80 2000 based on actual soil resistivity, fault level, clearing time, and substation dimensions.
Substation Fence Grounding Design
A specialist design element that Power Projects treats with the same rigour as the main earth grid — because it directly affects public safety outside the substation boundary.
The substation fence grounding design is an integral part of every earthing design Power Projects produces — not an optional add-on. The metallic security fence surrounding a substation presents a unique hazard: during a ground fault, the fence can conduct elevated potential from inside the substation to locations outside — where members of the public may be standing without any awareness of the risk. Every Power Projects earthing design report includes a documented fence grounding scheme and a calculation verifying that external touch voltages are within safe limits.
IEEE Std 80 specifically requires that the substation fence grounding approach be analysed, designed, and documented. An incorrectly designed fence grounding scheme can expose pedestrians, cyclists, and vehicle occupants outside the substation boundary to dangerous touch voltages during a fault — even when the fault occurs entirely within the compound. Power Projects includes a full fence grounding analysis and design in every earthing design report it issues.
Design Approach 1: Fence Bonded to the Earth Grid
The fence is directly connected to the substation earthing system via copper conductors at regular intervals along the fence line. Power Projects designs this bonded approach for substations where the fence is located within or close to the boundary of the earth grid. Our designs for this approach specify the bonding conductor size and spacing, and include a calculation verifying that the external touch voltage on the public side of the fence remains below the tolerable limit — which requires specifying a minimum width of crushed stone surface layer on the external side of the fence in the design drawings.
Design Approach 2: Fence Isolated from the Earth Grid
Where the fence extends significantly beyond the boundary of the earth grid, bonding the fence to the grid would carry the full substation ground potential rise to locations well outside the earthed area — where there is no surface stone layer and no gradient control. For these cases, Power Projects designs the fence with insulating sections in the posts or rails, and specifies a separate external earth electrode connected only to the fence. Our designs document the insulation arrangement, the external electrode specification, and include a verification calculation confirming the design adequacy.
Design Approach 3: Gradient Control Conductors
For substations with high soil resistivity, large fault currents, or elevated ground potential rise where neither the bonded nor isolated fence approach can achieve safe external touch voltages, Power Projects designs gradient control conductors — additional buried conductors in concentric rings outside the fence perimeter. Our designs for this approach include the layout and depth of each gradient control ring and a calculation confirming that the surface potential gradient in the public area is reduced to safe levels.
Earthing Design by Substation Voltage Level
Power Projects produces substation earthing designs for every voltage level — each presenting its own specific engineering challenges and design requirements.
11 kV & 33 kV Distribution Substations
Distribution substations at 11 kV and 33 kV are the most common type Power Projects produces earthing designs for. Their designs are frequently underestimated — smaller fault currents and compact footprints can give a misleading impression that the design is simple. However, distribution substations are often located in densely populated urban and peri-urban areas, with public pedestrian traffic close to the fence. The earthing design for substation at these voltages requires as much rigour as a transmission substation — particularly regarding substation fence grounding design and the verification of external touch voltages in areas accessible to the public.
66 kV & 132 kV Grid Substations
Grid substations at 66 kV and 132 kV involve larger substation areas, higher fault currents, and more complex equipment arrangements. Power Projects earthing designs for these substations address higher thermal demands on conductors, the need to maintain safe voltages across a larger yard footprint, and the increased importance of accurately modelling the soil profile across the larger site. Our designs at this voltage level commonly incorporate non-uniform grid spacing and carefully positioned perimeter rods to achieve the required voltage performance efficiently.
220 kV & 400 kV Transmission Substations
Transmission substations present the most demanding substation earthing design challenges. Fault currents can exceed 40 kA, substation areas can cover several hectares, and the consequences of an inadequately designed earthing system are severe. Power Projects uses specialist grounding grid design software for all 220 kV and 400 kV earthing design projects, producing surface potential contour maps and verifying that every location in the substation yard — including equipment areas, control building surrounds, cable trench covers, and fence perimeters — satisfies the IEEE Std 80 safety criteria before the design is issued for construction.
Power Projects has produced substation earthing designs for substations ranging from compact 11 kV ring main unit installations to large 400 kV gas-insulated switchgear transmission stations. Our engineering team has experience designing earthing systems for air-insulated, gas-insulated, and mixed-technology substations — including new-build projects, substation extensions, voltage uprating schemes, and design reviews of existing earthing systems for compliance with current IEEE Std 80 standards.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Power Projects' substation earthing design services.
Request a Substation Earthing Design
Power Projects delivers complete, IEC 60364, EN 50522, AS/NZS 3000, AS/NZS 2067 compliant substation earthing design packages — calculation reports and construction-ready drawings — for substations at every voltage level across worldwide.