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AS/NZS 3008 Table 22: Temperature Derating Factors

AS/NZS 3008 Table 22 explained — ambient temperature derating factors for above-ground cables. Correction values from 25°C to 80°C for V-75, V-90, and X-90 insulation.

AS/NZS 30089 min readUpdated March 19, 2026
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What Is AS/NZS 3008 Table 22?

Table 22 of AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 provides ambient temperature derating factors for cables installed above ground. These factors adjust the base current-carrying capacity (from Tables 13, 14, or 15) when the actual ambient air temperature differs from the 40°C reference temperature.

Unlike BS 7671 and IEC 60364 (which use 30°C as the reference), AS/NZS 3008 uses 40°C because Australian conditions frequently expose cables to elevated ambient temperatures — particularly in roof spaces, outdoor enclosures, plant rooms, and northern Australian locations where summer temperatures routinely exceed 40°C.

Table 22 covers temperatures from 25°C to 80°C and provides factors for three conductor operating temperature ratings:

  • 75°C — V-75 (standard PVC/thermoplastic)
  • 90°C — V-90 (heat-resistant PVC) and X-90 (XLPE)
  • 110°C — Silicone and other high-temperature insulations

For buried cables, use Table 23 instead, which provides factors based on ground (soil) temperature with a 25°C reference.

Table 22 — Complete Derating Factor Values

The following table reproduces the key values from AS/NZS 3008 Table 22:

Ambient Temp (°C)75°C Insulation90°C Insulation110°C Insulation
251.201.141.10
301.131.101.07
351.071.051.04
40 (reference)1.001.001.00
450.930.950.96
500.840.890.93
550.760.840.89
600.650.770.84
650.530.710.80
700.380.630.76
750.550.71
800.450.65
Above 40°C: Derating is required. Below 40°C: The factor exceeds 1.0, effectively increasing the cable’s usable rating. At 25°C ambient, a V-75 cable gains 20% capacity compared to the tabulated value.

Uprating Below 40°C — A Unique AS/NZS Feature

Because the AS/NZS 3008 reference is 40°C (higher than BS 7671’s 30°C), cables installed in environments below 40°C benefit from an uprating factor greater than 1.0. This is a common situation in:

  • Temperate southern Australian cities (Melbourne, Hobart, Adelaide) where typical ambient is 25–35°C
  • Air-conditioned plant rooms maintained at 25°C year-round
  • Underground car parks and basements where ambient rarely exceeds 30°C
  • New Zealand installations where ambient seldom exceeds 30°C

For example, at 25°C ambient with 90°C insulation, the factor is 1.14 — meaning a cable rated at 100 A in Table 13 can actually carry 114 A. This can sometimes allow a smaller cable size, reducing cost and installation effort.

However, uprating should only be applied when the lower ambient temperature can be guaranteed for the cable’s entire service life. A cable installed in an air-conditioned room today may be in a non-conditioned space after a building refurbishment 15 years later.

Hot Climate Derating — The Australian Challenge

In hot Australian environments, temperature derating can have a dramatic effect on cable sizing:

Scenario: Cable in outdoor enclosure, inland Queensland
  Maximum ambient temperature: 55°C
  Cable type: V-90 copper multicore
  Design current: 80 A

  Table 22 factor at 55°C for 90°C insulation: 0.84

  Required tabulated rating: 80 / 0.84 = 95.2 A

  Without temperature derating, a 25 mm² cable (87 A, Col 6) suffices.
  With derating, 35 mm² (107 A, Col 6) is needed.

  Impact: One cable size larger = 40% more copper by weight.

The situation is even more severe for V-75 insulation: at 55°C, the factor drops to 0.76, requiring a tabulated rating of 80 / 0.76 = 105.3 A — pushing to the same 35 mm² cable but with less safety margin.

Environments that commonly exceed 40°C in Australian practice include:

  • Roof spaces: Can reach 60–70°C in summer
  • Outdoor switchboards: 45–55°C with sun exposure
  • Engine rooms and plant rooms: 40–50°C from equipment heat
  • North-facing walls: Radiant heating can add 10–15°C to ambient

Mathematical Basis of Temperature Correction

The temperature correction factor is derived from the thermal equation for cable current-carrying capacity. The factor is calculated as:

kt = √((Tmax − Ta) / (Tmax − Tref))

where:

  • Tmax = maximum conductor operating temperature (75°C for V-75, 90°C for V-90/X-90)
  • Ta = actual ambient temperature
  • Tref = reference ambient temperature (40°C)

For example, V-90 cable at 50°C ambient:

kt = √((90 − 50) / (90 − 40))
    = √(40 / 50)
    = √0.80
    = 0.894 ≈ 0.89

This formula also explains why cables with higher insulation ratings are less affected by temperature increases — the larger the (Tmax − Tref) denominator, the less impact each degree of ambient increase has on the square root ratio.

Table 22 vs Table 23 — Air vs Ground Temperature

AS/NZS 3008 provides two separate temperature derating tables:

TableApplies ToReference TempTypical Range
Table 22Above-ground installations (air)40°C25–80°C
Table 23Underground/buried installations25°C10–40°C

Ground temperatures are more stable than air temperatures and are generally lower in summer. In most Australian locations, the ground temperature at 500 mm depth (standard burial depth) is 20–30°C even when the air temperature exceeds 40°C. This is why Table 23 uses a lower reference (25°C) and covers a narrower temperature range.

Never use Table 22 for buried cables or Table 23 for above-ground installations. The different reference temperatures and the different thermal environments (convective air vs conductive soil) make the factors non-interchangeable.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Under AS/NZS 3008, derating is required when the ambient air temperature exceeds the 40°C reference. Below 40°C, the factor is greater than 1.0 (uprating), which means the cable can carry more current than the tabulated value. In practice, most Australian installations in temperate regions can benefit from the uprating, while installations in hot locations (roof spaces, outdoor enclosures, northern Australia) will need derating.
Australian roof spaces can reach 60-70°C in summer. AS/NZS 3008 and AS/NZS 3000 recommend using the maximum temperature expected to occur for more than 1 hour per day during the hottest period. Common design values are: insulated ceiling with dark-coloured roof = 60°C, ventilated roof space = 50°C, air-conditioned ceiling void = 35°C. Always use the worst-case temperature for the life of the installation.
The different reference temperatures reflect the different climate zones these standards were designed for. BS 7671 uses 30°C (appropriate for the UK and Northern Europe where ambient rarely exceeds 30°C). AS/NZS 3008 uses 40°C (appropriate for Australia where many locations routinely reach or exceed 35°C). The practical effect is that AS/NZS 3008 tabulated ratings are slightly lower than equivalent BS 7671 ratings for the same cable, but the Australian cables do not need temperature derating as often.

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