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Worked Example: Medium Voltage Cable Sizing for a Hospital Feeder — The Gorakhpur Tragedy

Complete IEC 60287 medium voltage cable sizing calculation for an 11 kV hospital feeder. Covers thermal circuit model, soil thermal resistivity correction, voltage drop at MV, short circuit withstand, and screen earthing — and why the 2017 Gorakhpur hospital tragedy exposed the consequences of degraded MV infrastructure.

IEC 6028719 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: When a Hospital’s Lifeline Cable Failed

In August 2017, at BRD Medical College in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, over 63 children died in the paediatric and neonatal intensive care wards over a five-day period. The immediate cause was the failure of the hospital’s liquid oxygen supply, but the chain of events that led to the catastrophe revealed a deeper infrastructure crisis — including the degradation of the hospital’s 11 kV medium voltage feeder cable.

The MV cable supplying BRD Medical College had been repeatedly repaired with substandard joints over the years. As the hospital expanded — adding ICU beds, NICU facilities, and additional wards — the electrical demand grew well beyond what the original cable had been designed to carry. Monsoon conditions caused waterlogging of the direct-buried cable trenches, dramatically increasing the soil thermal resistivity around the cable and reducing its effective current rating. When the cable finally failed under sustained overload during the monsoon, the backup diesel generator could not start due to a separate maintenance failure, and the oxygen concentrator plant lost power entirely.

This tragedy underscores a critical but often overlooked aspect of hospital electrical design: the medium voltage feeder cable is the single point of failure for the entire facility. IEC 60287 provides the methodology for calculating continuous current ratings of MV cables under real-world thermal conditions — not just the idealised conditions printed in manufacturer catalogues. This worked example demonstrates how to properly size an 11 kV hospital feeder cable, accounting for tropical soil conditions, burial depth, and the thermal environment that ultimately determines whether the cable survives or fails.

Scenario: 11 kV Hospital Feeder Cable

Size an 11 kV XLPE medium voltage feeder cable for a 500-bed hospital with expanding demand.

ParameterValue
Supply voltage11 kV three-phase, 50 Hz
Hospital demand2,500 kVA (2.5 MVA)
Power factor0.85 lagging
Cable route length800 m (from 11 kV substation to hospital HV/LV transformer)
Installation methodDirect buried, 1.0 m depth, no duct
Soil thermal resistivity0.7 K·m/W (waterlogged alluvial soil, monsoon conditions)
Ground temperature35°C (tropical, northern India)
Cable type3-core 11 kV XLPE insulated, copper conductor, copper wire screen
Prospective fault current12.5 kA (from utility short-circuit study)
Protection clearing time0.5 s (upstream relay + breaker)
Primary standardIEC 60287-1-1:2006, IEC 60502-2:2014

Step 1: Calculate Design Current

For a three-phase system, the design current from the hospital demand:

Ib = S / (√3 × V) — (Eq. 1)

Ib = 2,500,000 / (√3 × 11,000)

Ib = 2,500,000 / 19,053

Ib = 131.2 A

Note: Hospital demand is inherently variable. The 2,500 kVA figure should include a growth factor of at least 20% for future expansion per IEC 60364-3, Clause 311. Gorakhpur’s cable was originally sized for a much smaller load, and the hospital’s expansion was never accompanied by a cable upgrade.

Step 2: Select Cable Construction

Per IEC 60502-2:2014, select a 3-core 11 kV XLPE cable with copper conductors. The candidate sizes and their base current ratings (in air at 30°C, from manufacturer data per IEC 60287 reference conditions) are:

Conductor Size (mm²)Base Rating in Air (A)Base Rating Direct Buried (A)
70225175
95270210
120310240
150350270

The base ratings above assume standard conditions: soil thermal resistivity of 1.0 K·m/W, ground temperature of 20°C, and burial depth of 0.8 m. Our actual conditions differ significantly — we must apply correction factors per the IEC 60287 thermal circuit model.

Step 3: Calculate Soil Thermal Resistivity Correction

The soil thermal resistivity is the single most important environmental factor for buried MV cables. Per IEC 60287-3-1:1999, Clause 4, the correction factor for soil thermal resistivity different from the standard 1.0 K·m/W:

The thermal resistance of the surrounding soil in the IEC 60287 thermal circuit:

T4 = (ρsoil / 2π) × ln(2L / De) — (Eq. 2)

Where ρsoil = soil thermal resistivity (K·m/W), L = burial depth (m), De = external diameter of cable (m).

For a 95 mm² 3-core 11 kV XLPE cable, De ≈ 0.055 m. At standard conditions (ρ = 1.0, L = 0.8 m):

T4,std = (1.0 / 2π) × ln(2 × 0.8 / 0.055) = 0.159 × ln(29.1) = 0.159 × 3.37 = 0.536 K·m/W

At our actual conditions (ρ = 0.7, L = 1.0 m):

T4,actual = (0.7 / 2π) × ln(2 × 1.0 / 0.055) = 0.111 × ln(36.4) = 0.111 × 3.59 = 0.399 K·m/W

The waterlogged soil (ρ = 0.7) actually improves heat dissipation compared to standard dry soil (ρ = 1.0). However, the critical danger is when the water table drops — dry alluvial soil can reach ρ = 2.0–3.0 K·m/W, dramatically reducing the cable’s rating.

Critical insight: Gorakhpur’s soil alternates between waterlogged during monsoon (ρ ≈ 0.7) and dry during summer (ρ ≈ 2.5). The cable must be sized for the worst-case dry condition, not the favourable monsoon condition. Using ρ = 2.5 K·m/W for design:

T4,design = (2.5 / 2π) × ln(36.4) = 0.398 × 3.59 = 1.429 K·m/W

Step 4: Apply Ground Temperature Correction

The standard ground temperature for IEC 60287 base ratings is 20°C. At 35°C ground temperature (tropical India), the temperature correction factor per IEC 60287-3-1, Table 2:

kθ = √((θmax − θground) / (θmax − θref)) — (Eq. 3)

Where θmax = 90°C (XLPE maximum operating temperature), θground = 35°C, θref = 20°C:

kθ = √((90 − 35) / (90 − 20))

kθ = √(55 / 70)

kθ = √(0.786)

kθ = 0.886

The high ground temperature alone reduces the cable’s current rating by over 11% compared to temperate conditions.

Step 5: Apply Depth of Burial Correction

Deeper burial increases the thermal resistance between the cable and the ground surface, reducing the cable’s ability to dissipate heat. The correction factor for 1.0 m depth versus the standard 0.8 m per IEC 60287-3-1, Clause 4.2:

kd = ln(2 × Lref / De) / ln(2 × Lactual / De) — (Eq. 4, simplified)

kd = ln(2 × 0.8 / 0.055) / ln(2 × 1.0 / 0.055)

kd = ln(29.1) / ln(36.4) = 3.37 / 3.59

kd = 0.939

The deeper burial reduces the rating by approximately 6%.

Step 6: Calculate Derated Current Rating and Select Cable

Combining the soil resistivity correction (using design worst-case ρ = 2.5), ground temperature correction, and depth correction. The overall derating relative to the standard direct-buried rating:

For the soil resistivity effect, we apply the ratio of thermal resistances. The combined correction factor for soil resistivity versus the standard 1.0 K·m/W condition:

kρ ≈ √(T4,std / T4,design) = √(0.536 / 1.429) = √(0.375) = 0.613 — (Eq. 5, simplified)

Combined derating factor:

ktotal = kθ × kd × kρ = 0.886 × 0.939 × 0.613 — (Eq. 6)

ktotal = 0.510

This is a dramatic derating — the cable retains only 51% of its catalogue rating under these conditions. Now determine the required cable size:

Iz,required = Ib / ktotal = 131.2 / 0.510 = 257.3 A — (Eq. 7)

Cable Size (mm²)Base Rating (A)Derated Rating (A)Result
7017589.3✗ Too low
95210107.1✗ Too low
120240122.4✗ Too low
150270137.7✓ Passes (137.7 > 131.2)
Note: Under standard catalogue conditions, 95 mm² (210 A) would appear adequate for 131 A. Under actual worst-case soil conditions, even 120 mm² fails. This is exactly the trap that caught Gorakhpur — a cable that looked adequate on paper was thermally insufficient in practice.

Step 7: Voltage Drop Verification

At 11 kV, voltage drop is calculated using the impedance method per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 525. For 150 mm² 3-core XLPE copper cable at 50 Hz:

From cable data (per IEC 60228): Rac = 0.124 Ω/km, XL = 0.078 Ω/km.

ΔV = √3 × Ib × L × (Rac cosφ + XL sinφ) — (Eq. 8)

ΔV = √3 × 131.2 × 0.8 × (0.124 × 0.85 + 0.078 × 0.527)

ΔV = 1.732 × 131.2 × 0.8 × (0.1054 + 0.0411)

ΔV = 181.7 × 0.1465

ΔV = 26.6 V

ΔV% = 26.6 / 11,000 × 100 = 0.24%

The allowable voltage drop for an MV feeder is typically 5% per IEC 60364-5-52, Annex G. At 0.24%, voltage drop is negligible for this MV cable. This is typical for MV systems — current capacity and thermal rating almost always govern the cable size, not voltage drop.

Step 8: Short Circuit Withstand Check

The cable conductor must withstand the prospective fault current for the protection clearing time without exceeding the short-circuit temperature limit. Using the adiabatic equation per IEC 60949:1988:

Smin = Isc × √t / k — (Eq. 9)

Where Isc = 12,500 A (prospective fault), t = 0.5 s (clearing time), k = 143 (copper conductor, XLPE insulation, initial 90°C, final 250°C per IEC 60364-5-54, Table 54.4).

Smin = 12,500 × √0.5 / 143

Smin = 12,500 × 0.707 / 143

Smin = 8,838 / 143

Smin = 61.8 mm²

Our selected 150 mm² cable far exceeds the minimum 61.8 mm² required for short circuit withstand. ✓ PASS

Step 9: Screen Fault Current Capacity

The cable screen (copper wire screen) must carry earth fault current until the protection clears. For a 150 mm² cable, a typical screen cross-section is 16 mm² copper wire screen. Using the same adiabatic equation for the screen:

Iscreen,max = ks × Sscreen / √t — (Eq. 10)

Where ks = 143 (copper screen, initial 90°C, final 250°C), Sscreen = 16 mm², t = 0.5 s:

Iscreen,max = 143 × 16 / √0.5

Iscreen,max = 2,288 / 0.707

Iscreen,max = 3,236 A

The earth fault current through the screen depends on the earthing system. For a solidly earthed 11 kV system, earth fault current can approach 60–70% of the three-phase fault level. At 70%:

Ief = 0.7 × 12,500 = 8,750 A

8,750 A > 3,236 A — the 16 mm² screen is insufficient. Solutions: specify a cable with a larger screen (e.g., 35 mm²), or use resistance earthing to limit earth fault current to below 3,236 A.

Note: Screen fault current capacity is frequently overlooked in MV cable specifications. An undersized screen will burn through during an earth fault, potentially causing a cable fire in the trench — exactly the kind of cascading failure that characterised Gorakhpur’s deteriorating infrastructure.

Result Summary

CheckRequirementActualStatus
Design current131.2 A
Thermal rating (worst-case soil)≥ 131.2 A (derated)137.7 A (150 mm², k = 0.510)✓ PASS
Voltage drop≤ 5.0%0.24%✓ PASS
Short circuit withstand≥ 61.8 mm²150 mm²✓ PASS
Screen fault current≥ 8,750 A (0.5 s)3,236 A (16 mm² screen)✗ FAIL — upgrade screen

Selected cable: 150 mm² 3-core 11 kV XLPE, copper conductor, with upgraded 35 mm² copper wire screen. The governing factor is thermal rating under worst-case dry soil conditions (ρ = 2.5 K·m/W). The dramatic 49% derating means a cable that appears generously oversized on paper (catalogue 270 A vs 131 A load) is in reality only marginally adequate.

What Would Have Prevented This?

The Gorakhpur tragedy was caused by a chain of failures — oxygen supply management, payment disputes, generator maintenance, and infrastructure neglect. For the MV cable component specifically:

  • Size MV cables for worst-case soil thermal resistivity, not average conditions — in regions with seasonal water table variation, the dry-season soil resistivity can be 3–4× the wet-season value; using catalogue ratings or monsoon-condition ratings leads to chronic overheating during summer
  • Include a minimum 20% growth factor for hospital feeders — hospitals expand incrementally (a new ICU here, additional wards there), and each expansion adds load to the same feeder; the cable must be sized for the anticipated demand, not just today’s load
  • Never use ad-hoc cable joints on MV circuits — MV cable joints must be factory-made heat-shrink or cold-shrink types installed by certified jointers; field-improvised joints are the leading cause of MV cable failure worldwide
  • Implement redundant feeders for critical facilities — hospitals, data centres, and water treatment plants should have two independent MV feeders with automatic changeover, so that a single cable failure does not result in total loss of supply
  • Conduct periodic thermal imaging and load monitoring — infrared surveys at MV cable terminations and joints can detect hot spots before they become faults; continuous load monitoring reveals when a cable is approaching its thermal limit

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Frequently Asked Questions

MV cables operate at much higher currents and generate significantly more heat (I²R losses) than LV cables. This heat must be conducted through the soil to the surface. Soil thermal resistivity determines how effectively this heat transfer occurs — dry sandy soil (2.0–3.0 K·m/W) acts like a thermal blanket, trapping heat around the cable and raising its operating temperature. Waterlogged clay (0.5–0.7 K·m/W) conducts heat away efficiently. A cable rated at 270 A in good soil may only carry 140 A in poor soil — the same cable, the same installation, but radically different performance.
Factory-made heat-shrink and cold-shrink MV joints, properly installed by trained jointers, have a service life of 25–40 years. They fail primarily due to installation errors (contamination, incorrect positioning, inadequate stress control), water ingress (damaged outer sheath allowing moisture to reach the insulation), and thermal cycling (repeated heating and cooling causes mechanical fatigue). Ad-hoc or improvised joints using tape and compound — the type used at Gorakhpur — have failure rates orders of magnitude higher and should never be used on MV circuits.
IEC 60502 specifies the cable construction requirements (insulation type, voltage rating, conductor materials, testing) — it tells you what the cable is. IEC 60287 provides the thermal calculation methodology for determining continuous current rating — it tells you what the cable can carry. Cable manufacturers use IEC 60287 to calculate the ratings published in their catalogues, but those ratings assume standard reference conditions. Engineers must use IEC 60287 to recalculate ratings for their actual installation conditions (soil type, burial depth, ground temperature, grouping).

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