Welcome to National Grid’s Tips of the Trade. National Grid is committed to your safety and these tips are intended to help you work safely near our facilities. Please review these tips with your coworkers at your tailgate or tool box meetings before work begins.
Natural gas leaks don’t always have an odor
National Grid adds an odorant, mercaptan, to natural gas that gives it its distinctive smell; many describe it as similar to sulfur or rotten eggs, but it may smell differently to you. Sometimes this odor is not apparent, so you must use your senses of sight and hearing (not just your nose) to detect a gas leak.
Look for
- Dirt spraying or blowing into the air
- Continual bubbling in water
- Grass or plants dead or dying for no apparent reason in an otherwise moist area
- A damaged connection to a gas appliance
- A pipeline compromised during excavation activities
- A pipeline exposed by a flood
Listen for
- A hissing, whistling or roaring sound
Dig safely
Call 811 or enter an online request well in advance of any digging job, no matter how small. The 811 service will notify underground facility owners in the immediate area so the location of utility lines can be marked prior to excavation.
- Before you call, delineate your dig area with white paint, flags or stakes.
- After you call, wait at least 72 hours before digging in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and at least 48 hours in New York, excluding weekends and legal holidays.
If you suspect a gas leak…
Warn others and evacuate the area. Do not use matches, cell phones, radios, lighters or anything else that could create a spark and ignite the gas. Leave the excavation open; do not operate pipeline valves or bury the line. From a safe location, call 911, call National Grid and report the leak to your supervisor. Stay away from the area until safety officials say it is safe to return.
Would you like to know more?
Additional overhead and digging guidelines, case studies, instructional videos and training tools can all be found, at no charge to you, on National Grid’s e-SMARTworkers website.
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For more contractor safety information, visit ngridsafety.com.
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