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Worked Example: Emergency Generator Feeder Cable Sizing — The Piper Alpha Lesson

Complete worked example sizing the feeder cable from a 500 kVA emergency diesel generator to an essential services switchboard, including engine cranking current allowance, black-start transients, and the mistake that left Piper Alpha without power.

IEC 6036420 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: When Emergency Power Fails

On 6 July 1988, the Piper Alpha oil platform in the North Sea exploded, killing 167 of 226 workers — the deadliest offshore oil disaster in history. A condensate leak from a blind flange on a pump that was under maintenance ignited, causing a series of explosions that destroyed the platform’s control room and accommodation module.

A critical factor in the death toll was the total loss of emergency power. The emergency diesel generator was located adjacent to the production module and was disabled by the initial explosion. But even on platforms where generators survive the initial event, a documented failure mode haunts emergency power systems worldwide: the generator starts, the essential loads transfer, and then — within seconds — the generator trips on under-frequency because the feeder cable voltage drop under simultaneous motor starting causes the generator to stall.

When every fire pump, bilge pump, emergency ventilation fan, and UPS system starts simultaneously after a blackout (a “black start”), the cable sees 3–5× the normal running current for 10–30 seconds. If the generator feeder cable was sized only for steady-state running current, the transient voltage drop can exceed 15%, causing the generator’s automatic voltage regulator to saturate, frequency to drop below 47 Hz, and the under-frequency relay to trip. The platform goes dark again — permanently.

Scenario: 500 kVA Emergency Generator Feeder

Size the feeder cable from a 500 kVA emergency diesel generator to the essential services main switchboard (MSB) in an industrial facility.

ParameterValue
Generator rating500 kVA, 415 V three-phase, 50 Hz, PF 0.8
Generator subtransient reactance (X”d)12%
Cable route length80 m (generator house to MSB)
Installation methodMulticore cables on perforated cable tray, single layer (Method E)
Other circuits on tray2 other circuits
Ambient temperature45°C (tropical offshore environment)
Cable typeXLPE insulated, copper conductor, 90°C rated
Primary standardIEC 60364-5-52

Essential loads on the MSB:

LoadRatingStart MethodRunning (A)Starting (A)
Fire pump30 kWDOL60360
Bilge pump15 kWDOL30180
Emergency ventilation22 kWStar-delta44110
Emergency lighting20 kWResistive4848
UPS system50 kVA1.5× inrush69104
Misc essential loads40 kWMixed80120
Total331922

Step 1: Calculate Generator Rated Current

The generator’s rated current at full load:

In = S / (√3 × V) — (Eq. 1)

In = 500,000 / (√3 × 415)

In = 695 A

At 0.8 power factor, the real power output is 500 × 0.8 = 400 kW. The total connected essential load running current (331 A) is well within the generator’s 695 A capacity. But this steady-state view is dangerously misleading.

Step 2: Analyse Black-Start Current

During a black-start event, ALL essential loads start simultaneously when the generator picks up and the automatic transfer switch (ATS) closes. The cable must carry the sum of all starting currents:

Iblack-start = Σ Istart = 360 + 180 + 110 + 48 + 104 + 120 = 922 A — (Eq. 2)

This is 2.8× the total running current and 1.33× the generator’s rated current. The transient lasts 8–15 seconds until the largest motors (fire pump, bilge pump) reach full speed.

The aha moment: A cable sized for 695 A (generator rated) must also tolerate 922 A for 15 seconds without excessive voltage drop. But the critical limit isn’t cable thermal capacity during the transient — the cable can handle 922 A for 15 seconds easily. The critical limit is voltage drop at 922 A, which determines whether the generator can maintain frequency and voltage stability during the black-start.

With proper load management (staggered starting with 5-second intervals between motor groups), the peak current can be reduced:

Istaggered ≈ Ifire-pump-start + Iother-running = 360 + (30 + 44 + 48 + 69 + 80) = 631 A — (Eq. 3)

Even with staggered starting, the cable sees 631 A for the first 8 seconds.

Step 3: Size Cable for Continuous Rating

First, determine the continuous current rating requirement. The cable must carry the generator’s full rated current (695 A), not just the current load, because additional essential loads may be connected in the future.

Derating factors per IEC 60364-5-52:

Ambient temperature at 45°C, XLPE 90°C rated cable. From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.14, Row 45°C, Column 90°C:

Ca = 0.87

Grouping: 3 circuits on perforated tray, single layer, touching. From Table B.52.17, Row: single layer on tray, 3 circuits:

Cg = 0.82

Combined derating factor:

Ctotal = Ca × Cg = 0.87 × 0.82 = 0.713 — (Eq. 4)

Required tabulated current rating:

It ≥ 695 / 0.713 = 975 A — (Eq. 5)

From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.4 (Method E, XLPE, copper, 3-core):

Cable Size (mm²)Rating (A)Result
240538✗ Single cable insufficient
300621✗ Single cable insufficient
400711✗ Single cable insufficient

No single cable is large enough. We need parallel cables.

Step 4: Select Parallel Cable Configuration

Using two cables in parallel per phase, each cable carries half the current. Required rating per cable:

It-per-cable ≥ 975 / 2 = 488 A — (Eq. 6)

From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.4:

Cable Size (mm²)Rating (A)Result
185436✗ Too low (436 < 488)
240538✓ Passes (538 ≥ 488)
300621✓ Passes with margin

Selected: 2 × 240 mm² XLPE copper cables in parallel per phase.

Parallel cable rules per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 523.6: Parallel cables must be the same type, same cross-section, same length, and same route. Unequal cable lengths cause unequal impedances, which cause unequal current sharing — the shorter cable carries more current and overheats. For this installation, both 240 mm² cables must follow identical 80 m routes.

Step 5: Voltage Drop at Rated Current

For 2 × 240 mm² XLPE copper cables, the combined impedance per metre is halved. From IEC 60364-5-52 Table B.52.1 for 240 mm²:

R = 0.0907 mΩ/m, X = 0.078 mΩ/m (at 90°C operating temperature)

For two parallel cables:

Rparallel = 0.0907 / 2 = 0.0454 mΩ/m

Xparallel = 0.078 / 2 = 0.039 mΩ/m

Voltage drop at rated current (695 A) using the full impedance method per IEC 60364-5-52, Clause 525:

ΔV = √3 × I × L × (R cosφ + X sinφ) — (Eq. 7)

ΔV = √3 × 695 × 80 × (0.0454 × 10−3 × 0.8 + 0.039 × 10−3 × 0.6)

ΔV = 1.732 × 695 × 80 × (0.0000363 + 0.0000234)

ΔV = 96,278 × 0.0000597

ΔV = 5.75 V

ΔV% = 5.75 / 415 × 100 = 1.39%

At rated running current, the voltage drop is 1.39% — well within the 3% limit recommended for generator feeders by IEEE 446 (Orange Book). PASS.

Step 6: Voltage Drop at Black-Start Current — The Critical Check

This is the check that separates a properly designed generator feeder from one that will fail in an emergency. At the staggered black-start peak current of 631 A:

ΔVstart = √3 × 631 × 80 × (0.0454 × 10−3 × 0.5 + 0.039 × 10−3 × 0.866) — (Eq. 8)

(Using PF = 0.5 during motor starting, typical for induction motors at locked rotor)

ΔVstart = 1.732 × 631 × 80 × (0.0000227 + 0.0000338)

ΔVstart = 87,418 × 0.0000565

ΔVstart = 4.94 V

ΔVstart% = 4.94 / 415 × 100 = 1.19%

At worst-case simultaneous start (922 A):

ΔVsimul = √3 × 922 × 80 × 0.0000565

ΔVsimul = 7.22 V = 1.74%

Both starting scenarios are well within the 10% transient voltage drop limit. The 2 × 240 mm² configuration provides adequate margin.

What if we used a single 300 mm² cable? At 922 A simultaneous start, the voltage drop would be approximately 8.2% — still technically acceptable, but the single cable cannot carry the 695 A continuous rated current after derating (621 × 0.713 = 443 A < 695 A). The single cable fails on continuous rating, not on starting voltage drop. This is why the generator feeder almost always requires parallel cables.

Step 7: Short Circuit Withstand

The generator’s prospective short-circuit current at its terminals:

Ik” = In / X”d = 695 / 0.12 = 5,792 A — (Eq. 9)

Verify the 240 mm² cable can withstand this for the MCCB clearing time. Using the adiabatic equation per IEC 60364-4-43, Clause 434.5.2:

k²S² ≥ I²t — (Eq. 10)

For XLPE copper cable: k = 143. Each parallel cable carries half the fault current.

k²S² = 143² × 240² = 20,449 × 57,600 = 1,177,862,400 A²s

At Ik”/2 = 2,896 A per cable, with MCCB clearing in 0.1 s:

I²t = 2,896² × 0.1 = 838,682 A²s

838,682 A²s << 1,177,862,400 A²s — PASS with very large margin.

Result Summary

CheckRequirementActualStatus
Continuous current capacity≥ 695 A (gen. rated)2 × 538 = 1,076 A (before derating), 767 A derated✓ PASS
Voltage drop (running)≤ 3% (IEEE 446)1.39%✓ PASS
Voltage drop (black-start)≤ 10% (transient)1.74% (simultaneous)✓ PASS
Short circuit withstandk²S² ≥ I²t1.18 × 10&sup9; >> 838,682 A²s✓ PASS

Selected: 2 × 240 mm² XLPE copper, 4-core, per phase on perforated cable tray. Both cables identical length (80 m), same route.

The governing factor is continuous current capacity. No single cable available in the IEC table range can carry the generator’s full 695 A rated current after derating for 45°C ambient and grouping. Parallel cables are mandatory, and the parallel cable rules (equal length, same route, same cross-section) must be strictly enforced.

What Would Have Prevented This?

The Piper Alpha disaster was primarily caused by permit-to-work failures and the absence of automatic deluge activation. However, the electrical engineering lessons are universally applicable:

  • Size generator feeders for the generator, not the load — the cable must carry the full generator rated current even if current loads are lower, because future loads will be added
  • Always check voltage drop at black-start current — this is the check that most designs omit, and it is the check that causes emergency power to fail when needed most
  • Implement load management — staggered motor starting (fire pump first, then bilge, then HVAC) reduces peak current by 30–40% and dramatically improves generator stability
  • Locate the generator and its feeder route in a separate fire zone — no cable sizing will help if the cable route is destroyed by the event it’s supposed to protect against
  • Test black-start annually — a simulated blackout test verifies that the cable, generator, and load management system all work together under realistic transient conditions

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Frequently Asked Questions

Parallel cables with different lengths have different impedances. The shorter cable has lower impedance and carries proportionally more current. If one cable carries 60% and the other 40%, the overloaded cable runs hotter, degrades faster, and may eventually fail. IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 523.6 requires identical type, cross-section, length, and route for all parallel cables.
A black-start is the process of restoring power to an electrical system from a complete blackout using a generator with no external power source. During a black-start, all essential loads start simultaneously (or in rapid sequence), creating a current demand 2-5 times the normal running current. The generator feeder cable and the generator itself must be sized to handle this transient without exceeding voltage drop limits or tripping on under-frequency.
Always size for the generator's full rated current, not the current connected load. The generator capacity represents the maximum current the cable may need to carry when additional loads are connected in the future. Additionally, during black-start transients the cable may momentarily carry more than the steady-state load current due to motor starting. Sizing for the generator provides margin for both scenarios.

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