Arc Flash Hazard Analysis
NFPA 70E compliant arc flash studies with IEEE 1584-2018 calculations, equipment labeling, and PPE recommendations. Required for any Georgia facility where energized electrical work is performed.
NFPA 70E · IEEE 1584 · OSHA
True Power Systems delivers arc flash analysis, short-circuit studies, and coordination studies for Georgia manufacturing plants, logistics and port facilities, data centers, municipalities, and healthcare institutions. PE-stamped and code-compliant.
Georgia Quick Facts
PE License
Active · State of Georgia
Standards
NFPA 70E · IEEE 1584 · IEEE 242 · ANSI C37 · OSHA 1910
Software Platforms
ETAP · EasyPower · SKM/PTW · CYMCAP
Georgia Services
All studies are performed by a licensed Professional Engineer, delivered with PE stamp, and compliant with NFPA 70E, IEEE 1584, and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.335 requirements.
NFPA 70E compliant arc flash studies with IEEE 1584-2018 calculations, equipment labeling, and PPE recommendations. Required for any Georgia facility where energized electrical work is performed.
NFPA 70E · IEEE 1584 · OSHA
Fault current calculations to verify equipment interrupting ratings are adequate. Required when adding new equipment, upgrading service, or when utility fault current levels have changed.
ANSI/IEEE · NFPA 70 NEC
Time-current curve analysis to ensure protective devices operate in the correct sequence. Critical for facilities with multiple sources, generators, or complex distribution systems.
IEEE 242 · NFPA 70
Power quality studies for facilities with VFDs, motor controls, or non-linear loads. Essential for Georgia wastewater treatment plants, manufacturing facilities, and data centers.
IEEE 519 · IEEE 1159
Steady-state power flow studies to identify voltage regulation issues and verify equipment loading. Critical for planning electrical infrastructure expansions and additions.
IEEE 399
Cable ampacity calculations for underground duct banks using CYMCAP, required for large commercial developments, utilities, and medium-voltage underground distribution projects in Georgia.
CYMCAP · Neher-McGrath
Georgia Markets
Potential Georgia Customer Base
Counts below are the total Georgia establishments per sector across the state — the universe of facilities that may need a power system study, not a TPS client list.
13,490
Manufacturing
426,781 workers
36,640
Healthcare & social assistance
645,786 workers
7,979
Educational services
413,233 workers
2,269
Data centers & hosting
24,526 workers
391,882 total Georgia establishments · Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, 2024 annual averages
Power system studies and Master Service Agreements for Georgia cities, counties, and public agencies. Arc flash compliance for city halls, public works facilities, and transit authorities.
Harmonic analysis and arc flash studies for Georgia water and wastewater utilities. Experience with pump station electrical systems, VFD installations, and SCADA-integrated power distribution.
Arc flash, short-circuit, and coordination studies for Georgia manufacturing plants, food processing facilities, and heavy industrial operations. OSHA compliance documentation included.
Power demand analysis and complete power system studies for Georgia data centers and mission-critical facilities. Capacity planning, redundancy verification, and feasibility studies for new and expanding sites.
Arc flash studies and electrical engineering support for Georgia K-12 schools and universities. Coverage for classroom buildings, athletic facilities, and central plant electrical systems.
Engineering support for Georgia EV charging installations and renewable energy projects, including charger load studies, service capacity analysis, and utility interconnection support.
Georgia Power Landscape
Every power system study TPS delivers in Georgia accounts for the utilities, fault duties, and interconnection requirements specific to the state. This is the landscape our Georgia work sits in.
Georgia is not part of a centralized RTO or ISO. The state wholesale grid is operated within the Southern Company balancing authority inside the SERC reliability region, and facilities are served by Georgia Power, the EMCs supplied through Oglethorpe Power, MEAG Power municipal systems, and Georgia Transmission Corporation. The available fault current at any facility service is set by the serving utility, and it can shift when that utility upgrades transformers or feeders, which is why short-circuit and arc flash studies should be revisited after utility-side work.
Georgia has no OSHA-approved state plan, so every employer in the state, public and private, answers to federal OSHA. Federal OSHA enforces electrical safety through 29 CFR 1910 Subpart S, which treats NFPA 70E as the consensus standard for arc flash risk assessment and equipment labeling. A current, PE-sealed arc flash study is the documentation a federal OSHA inspector or an insurance auditor expects to see.
The authority having jurisdiction for the installation itself is typically the local or county electrical inspection office enforcing the National Electrical Code as adopted in Georgia. Every study True Power Systems delivers in the state is modeled to current IEEE and NFPA methodology and sealed by a Professional Engineer licensed in Georgia.
Regulatory & Grid Context
State Regulator
Georgia Public Service Commission
Georgia PSC
Wholesale Grid Operator
Southern Company balancing authority (SERC region)
Major Georgia Utilities
Georgia Industrial Corridors
Why TPS in Georgia
True Power Systems holds an active Professional Engineer license in the State of Georgia and serves facilities across the state, from the Savannah logistics corridor to metro Atlanta manufacturing and data centers. Our engineers model every study in ETAP, EasyPower, SKM/PTW, and CYMCAP to current code.
We are registered as a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) in SAM.gov, satisfying both private-sector and government contracting requirements for Georgia cities, counties, and public agencies.
What Every Study Includes
VOSB & Federal Credentials
UEI: H6HAZKAD4LJ7 · CAGE: 08E02
NAICS 541330 / 541690 / 238210
Active SAM.gov Registration
SDVOSB-eligible per 38 U.S.C. § 8127
Georgia FAQ
Georgia has no state OSHA plan, so all employers in the state, public and private, answer to federal OSHA. Federal OSHA enforces electrical safety through 29 CFR 1910 Subpart S, which references NFPA 70E for arc flash risk assessment and equipment labeling.
If workers ever interact with energized equipment, such as troubleshooting, racking breakers, or voltage testing, NFPA 70E calls for an arc flash risk assessment and OSHA expects equipment to carry incident-energy labels. New equipment, a service upgrade, or a change in utility fault current all trigger a new or updated study.
Georgia is not in a centralized RTO; its wholesale grid runs through the Southern Company balancing authority within SERC, and facilities are served by Georgia Power, Oglethorpe Power EMCs, MEAG Power, and Georgia Transmission Corporation. The fault current available at your service comes from the utility and changes when the utility upgrades equipment, so short-circuit and arc flash results should be re-checked after utility-side work.
A power system study used for compliance must be sealed by a Professional Engineer licensed in Georgia. True Power Systems holds an active Georgia PE license and stamps every Georgia deliverable.
A complete package covers incident-energy calculations and arc flash boundaries, ANSI Z535 equipment labels, short-circuit and equipment-duty evaluation, protective-device coordination, an as-studied one-line diagram, and a PE-sealed report.
Georgia Inquiries
Ready to get started on a Georgia power system study? Fill out the form and a TPS engineer will respond within one business day with a scope and fee proposal.
Contact TPS
Not in Georgia? TPS is PE-licensed in AL, AR, FL, GA, IL, IN, KY, LA, MD, MI, ND, NV, OH, PA, SC, TN, VA, WA. Find your state →