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Thermography Is No Longer Optional: NFPA 70B’s New Mandatory Standard Explained

⚡ NFPA 70B Has Changed — Thermography Is Now Part of a Required Maintenance Standard

For years, NFPA 70B was viewed as a “recommended practice.” That changed with the release of the 2023 edition of NFPA 70B.

NFPA 70B is now titled:

NFPA 70B — Standard for Electrical Equipment Maintenance

Once a document becomes a Standard, it is no longer optional when adopted by jurisdictions, insurance carriers, AHJs, and corporate risk management policies. And inside this new enforceable standard — thermography is now an explicit requirement.

🔥 Where Thermography Now Becomes Mandatory

NFPA 70B requires that electrical equipment be inspected, tested, and maintained under a documented maintenance program. That program now includes:

✔ Infrared thermographic inspections of electrical equipment

✔ Qualified personnel performing those inspections

✔ Documentation, trending, and corrective actions

Thermography is no longer “nice to have.” It is now a formal compliance requirement inside the electrical maintenance standard itself.

📊 Why This Changes Everything

• OSHA General Duty Clause

• Insurance carrier loss-prevention programs

• Facility maintenance policies

• Risk management audits

• Civil liability after electrical failures

⚠ Equipment failure

⚠ Fire loss

⚠ Insurance claim denial

⚠ Regulatory penalties

⚠ Legal liability

🎥 Detailed Breakdown Video

🧰 What This Means for Electricians & Inspectors

• Electrical maintenance is enforceable

• Thermographic inspections are required

• Personnel must be properly trained and qualified

• Reports must be documented and defensible

🚨 Bottom Line

NFPA 70B is no longer just guidance — it is now the foundation of modern electrical maintenance compliance. And thermography has officially become part of that required framework.

If your organization is not implementing routine infrared inspections performed by qualified professionals, you are already behind the compliance curve.

Join the Certified Thermal Electrician (CTE) Program: https://thermalelectrician.com

This article is provided for educational purposes. Always consult the latest adopted codes, standards, and AHJ requirements applicable to your jurisdiction.

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