ENE/Wind/TBT-ENE-017
Wind Turbine Rescue Procedures
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Wind Turbine Rescue Procedures
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-ENE-017 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Wind turbine rescue involves recovering incapacitated workers from nacelles, towers, and hubs at extreme height.
- Standard emergency services cannot easily reach workers at nacelle height, typically 80 to 150 metres above ground.
- GWO (Global Wind Organisation) rescue training is mandatory for all personnel who work at height on wind turbines.
- Rescue plans must cover casualty lowering, self-rescue, buddy rescue, and helicopter evacuation scenarios.
- Suspension trauma can develop within minutes when an unconscious worker hangs in a harness after a fall.
- Rescue equipment including descenders, stretchers, hauling systems, and first aid must be available at nacelle level.
- Communication between the rescue team at height and ground-level support is critical throughout the operation.
- Practice rescue drills must be carried out regularly so the team can perform under stress when needed.
- Weather conditions at turbine height can prevent or complicate rescue attempts significantly.
- The Work at Height Regulations 2005 require a rescue plan before any person works at height on a turbine.
Why?
| Time critical | Suspension trauma kills within 20 minutes — rescue from turbine height must be fast and pre-planned. |
| Inaccessible location | Emergency services cannot reach nacelle height quickly — the on-site team must perform the initial rescue. |
| Legal requirement | The Work at Height Regulations 2005 require a rescue plan before any work at height begins. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Working at Height on Wind Turbines | Rescue Plan Requirements |
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