Jobsite Safety & PPE (Topic 1) in Module 1 – Solar-PV-NABCEP-Associate (BG)

Jobsite Safety & PPE

PV work combines construction hazards (ladders, roofs, tools, weather) with electrical hazards (shock, arc flash). A safe installer builds a repeatable routine:

  1. Plan the work (scope, tools, weather, access)
  2. Identify hazards (fall, electrical, sharp edges, lifting, heat)
  3. Select controls (engineering controls, work practices, PPE)
  4. Communicate (job briefing, roles, stop-work authority)

PPE basics

PPE is the last line of defense. Typical PV PPE may include: - Eye protection (impact-rated) - Gloves matched to the hazard (cut-resistant vs. electrical-rated) - Hard hat (jobsite dependent) - Hearing protection (when using loud tools) - High-visibility clothing (traffic/active sites) - Appropriate footwear (slip-resistant; often safety toe)

Environmental conditions

Heat, wind, rain, and lightning materially change risk. If conditions exceed safe limits, the safest decision is to pause work.

Jobsite Safety & PPE

PV work combines construction hazards (ladders, roofs, tools, weather) with electrical hazards (shock, arc flash). A safe installer builds a repeatable routine:

  1. Plan the work (scope, tools, weather, access)
  2. Identify hazards (fall, electrical, sharp edges, lifting, heat)
  3. Select controls (engineering controls, work practices, PPE)
  4. Communicate (job briefing, roles, stop-work authority)

PPE basics

PPE is the last line of defense. Typical PV PPE may include: - Eye protection (impact-rated) - Gloves matched to the hazard (cut-resistant vs. electrical-rated) - Hard hat (jobsite dependent) - Hearing protection (when using loud tools) - High-visibility clothing (traffic/active sites) - Appropriate footwear (slip-resistant; often safety toe)

Environmental conditions

Heat, wind, rain, and lightning materially change risk. If conditions exceed safe limits, the safest decision is to pause work.