The Real Cost of Power Factor: A Cable Copper Analysis Across 50 Industrial Sites
Uncorrected power factor (PF 0.65-0.85) inflates cable sizing by 18-54% compared to corrected installations (PF 0.95+). For a typical 2 MW facility, cable savings from PF correction justify capacitor bank costs within 8-14 months.
Key Finding
The Overlooked Capital Cost
Every electrical engineer understands that poor power factor increases current for a given real power load. The formula is elementary:
I = P / (√3 × V × PF)
At PF = 0.70, the current drawn for a 100 kW three-phase load at 400V is:
I = 100,000 / (1.732 × 400 × 0.70) = 206 A
At PF = 0.95, the same 100 kW:
I = 100,000 / (1.732 × 400 × 0.95) = 152 A
That is 36% more current at PF 0.70 — and cable sizing is driven by current. Yet in standard practice, power factor correction is evaluated almost exclusively on its revenue-side benefits: reduced utility demand charges, avoided reactive power penalties, and improved voltage regulation. The capital-side benefit — smaller cables, smaller switchgear, smaller transformers — is rarely quantified because PF correction is typically designed after the electrical distribution system, not before it.
This analysis reverses that sequence. We ask: if PF correction is installed at the main switchboard from day one, how much does the entire cable system cost change?
The 50-Site Dataset
We modeled 50 industrial facility profiles representing five industry segments, each with characteristic power factor ranges and load compositions.
Facility profiles:
| Industry Segment | Sites | Avg Demand (kW) | Typical PF (uncorrected) | Primary Loads |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metal fabrication / welding | 12 | 1,800 | 0.65–0.72 | Welders, induction furnaces, presses |
| Food & beverage processing | 10 | 2,200 | 0.72–0.80 | Refrigeration, conveyors, pumps |
| Plastics / injection molding | 8 | 1,600 | 0.68–0.75 | Injection molding machines, extruders |
| General manufacturing | 12 | 2,000 | 0.75–0.82 | Mixed motor loads, CNC machines |
| Warehousing / logistics | 8 | 1,200 | 0.80–0.88 | Lighting, conveyor systems, charging |
Power factor distribution across all 50 sites (uncorrected):
| PF Range | Sites | Share |
|---|---|---|
| 0.60–0.69 | 8 | 16% |
| 0.70–0.79 | 19 | 38% |
| 0.80–0.89 | 18 | 36% |
| 0.90–0.95 | 5 | 10% |
Only 10% of sites operated above PF 0.90 without correction. The median uncorrected power factor was 0.77.
Cable Current: The Multiplier Effect
The relationship between power factor and cable current is inversely proportional, but the cable sizing impact is non-linear because cable sizes come in discrete steps.
Current multiplier relative to PF = 0.95:
| Uncorrected PF | Current Multiplier (vs PF=0.95) | Cable Size Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 0.65 | 1.462 | +2 to 3 standard sizes |
| 0.70 | 1.357 | +1 to 2 standard sizes |
| 0.75 | 1.267 | +1 to 2 standard sizes |
| 0.80 | 1.188 | +1 standard size |
| 0.85 | 1.118 | +0 to 1 standard size |
| 0.90 | 1.056 | Usually same size |
| 0.95 | 1.000 | Reference |
For the metal fabrication segment (average PF 0.68), the current is 40% higher than it would be at PF 0.95. This does not mean 40% more copper — it means the next one or two standard cable sizes up, which often represents 50–80% more cross-sectional area due to the non-linear spacing of standard sizes (e.g., jumping from 50 mm² to 70 mm² is a 40% increase in area; from 70 mm² to 95 mm² is a 36% increase).
The 2 MW Reference Facility: Full Cable Bill Comparison
We modeled a detailed cable schedule for a representative 2 MW general manufacturing facility.
Cable schedule comparison: PF = 0.70 vs PF = 0.95
| Circuit Category | Cable Size at PF=0.70 | Cable Size at PF=0.95 | Length (m) | Cost at PF=0.70 (USD) | Cost at PF=0.95 (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main incomer (2 runs) | 2×300 mm² | 2×185 mm² | 25 | $38,400 | $24,200 |
| MCC feeders (4) | 95 mm² | 70 mm² | 320 total | $79,400 | $55,000 |
| DB feeders (6) | 35 mm² | 25 mm² | 480 total | $37,600 | $23,100 |
| Motor circuits 30–90 kW (12) | 25–50 mm² | 16–35 mm² | 960 total | $68,200 | $46,800 |
| Motor circuits 7.5–22 kW (28) | 10–16 mm² | 6–10 mm² | 2,240 total | $52,300 | $33,100 |
| Motor circuits 0.75–5.5 kW (45) | 4–6 mm² | 2.5–4 mm² | 3,150 total | $31,500 | $21,400 |
| General power (40) | 4 mm² | 2.5 mm² | 2,800 total | $19,600 | $11,800 |
| Lighting (25) | 2.5 mm² | 2.5 mm² | 1,750 total | $7,400 | $7,400 |
| Total cable | 11,725 | $334,400 | $222,800 |
Cable cost difference: $111,600 (33.4% reduction at PF=0.95)
Lighting circuits show no change because they are sized by minimum regulatory requirements (2.5 mm² per AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017) rather than by current capacity. All other categories show significant reductions.
Beyond Cables: Cascade Savings
Smaller cables produce cascade savings across the installation:
Total installation cost comparison (2 MW facility):
| Cost Element | PF = 0.70 | PF = 0.95 | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cable material | $334,400 | $222,800 | $111,600 |
| Conduit and trunking | $62,000 | $48,200 | $13,800 |
| Cable glands and lugs | $18,400 | $14,100 | $4,300 |
| Switchgear (larger frame sizes at higher current) | $142,000 | $118,000 | $24,000 |
| Transformer sizing | $86,000 | $72,000 | $14,000 |
| Installation labor | $124,000 | $98,000 | $26,000 |
| Total electrical installation | $766,800 | $573,100 | $193,700 |
PF Correction Cost vs Cable Savings: The Payback
For the 2 MW facility at PF = 0.70, correction to PF = 0.95 requires approximately 980 kVAr of capacitor bank capacity.
PF correction system cost:
| Component | Cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Automatic capacitor bank, 980 kVAr, 6-step, 400V | $42,000 |
| Detuned reactors (7% for harmonic filtering) | $12,000 |
| Dedicated feeder and protection | $6,200 |
| Installation and commissioning | $8,800 |
| Total PF correction cost | $69,000 |
Payback calculation (cable savings only):
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total cable savings | $111,600 |
| Total installation savings (all elements) | $193,700 |
| PF correction cost | $69,000 |
| Payback on cable savings alone | 7.4 months equivalent |
| Payback on total installation savings | 4.3 months equivalent |
The correction system costs $69,000 and saves $193,700 in installation costs on day one — a 2.8× return before the first electricity bill arrives.
Results Across All 50 Sites
| Industry Segment | Avg PF | Avg Cable Savings (%) | Avg Total Install Savings (%) | Avg Payback (cable only) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metal fabrication | 0.68 | 38.2% | 28.4% | 6.8 months |
| Food & beverage | 0.76 | 24.1% | 18.7% | 10.2 months |
| Plastics | 0.71 | 32.8% | 24.6% | 8.1 months |
| General manufacturing | 0.78 | 21.3% | 16.9% | 11.4 months |
| Warehousing | 0.84 | 12.6% | 9.8% | 14.2 months |
| All 50 sites (weighted avg) | 0.77 | 26.4% | 20.1% | 10.1 months |
Every industry segment shows a payback under 15 months when calculated on cable savings alone. Metal fabrication — with its characteristically poor power factor from welding and induction heating loads — shows the strongest case, with cable savings alone covering the correction system cost in under 7 months.
When PF Correction Does Not Help Cable Sizing
There are scenarios where PF correction has minimal impact on cable sizes:
- Short cable runs (under 10 m): The cable is sized by minimum regulatory requirements, not by current capacity.
- Motor circuits with direct-on-line starting: The cable must be sized for starting current (typically 6–8× full load current), which dominates over the running current at any power factor.
- Highly intermittent loads: Cables sized for cyclic loading per AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 Clause 3.4 or IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 523.3 already have thermal margin that absorbs the PF effect.
- Already-corrected loads: Modern variable speed drives (VSDs) with active front ends inherently operate at PF > 0.95.
Recommendations
- Design PF correction before cable sizing, not after. The optimal sequence is: determine load profile, specify PF correction target, then size cables to the corrected current.
- Specify PF 0.95 minimum as a design basis for all new industrial installations. Per IEC 60364-8-1, Clause 8.2, power factor correction is recommended as a design consideration for energy efficiency.
- Include cable capital savings in PF correction proposals. The combined payback is typically 40–60% shorter than the utility-only payback.
- Use detuned reactors (5–7%) for all industrial capacitor banks. The 7% detuning reactor cost adds approximately 25–30% to the capacitor bank price but is essential for reliability per IEC 61642.
- Re-evaluate existing facilities with PF below 0.80. Even in existing installations, PF correction still delivers utility bill savings, reduced losses, and freed transformer capacity.
Methodology note: Cable sizing follows IEC 60364-5-52 methodology. Pricing uses 2025 USD averages for copper XLPE cables from major industrial distributors.
Standards referenced: IEC 60364-5-52:2009+A1:2011, IEC 61642:1997, AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017, IEC 60364-8-1:2019.
Try the Cable Sizing Calculator
Put this methodology into practice. Calculate results with full standard clause references — free, no sign-up required.
Or embed this calculator on your siteRelated Resources
Cable Sizing Calculator
Size cables with power factor input to see the direct impact on conductor selection.
Read moreMaximum Demand Calculator
Calculate maximum demand with power factor correction scenarios for cost comparison.
Read moreTransformer Sizing Calculator
Size transformers considering corrected vs uncorrected power factor loads.
Read more