A class E fire is a fire involving live, electrically energised equipment including wiring, switchboards, motors, computers, UPS units, and servers where the active electrical supply is still on. That live supply creates an electrocution risk that makes class E fires uniquely dangerous. Water and foam conduct electricity and can kill the person trying to fight the fire. Only CO₂ fire extinguisher and dry powder extinguishers with verified dielectric safety ratings are safe to use on a class E fire.
Class E classification applies only while the equipment is energised. Once the power is confirmed off, the fire is reclassified by what is burning, usually class A fire for plastics and insulation and could it different classes of fire.
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| What is a Class E Fire? | A fire involving live electrical equipment. |
| Correct Extinguisher | CO₂ (primary), DCP (secondary), or a clean agent system for server rooms and sensitive electronics. |
| Never Use | Water, foam, or wet chemical extinguishers, as they can conduct electricity and increase risk. |
| Indian Standard | IS 15683:2018 (BIS) classifies these as Class E fires. |
| US Standard | NFPA 10 refers to the same hazard as a Class C fire. |
| European Standard | EN 2 / EN 3 does not define a separate electrical fire class. Extinguishers are marked with their tested electrical safety voltage. |
| First Action | De-energise the equipment if it is safe to do so. If power cannot be isolated, use a CO₂ extinguisher from approximately 1 metre away. |
A UPS unit in a commercial office had been running with a loose terminal for six weeks. The loose connection was arcing, tiny, brief sparks that left a faint burning smell. The maintenance team assumed the UPS was running warm. One evening, the arc ignited the terminal insulation and the fire spread to the cable tray above. The first person to respond grabbed the nearest red extinguisher, a water unit. The moment the water stream hit the live 230V output, the shock threw them across the room.
The difference between that water extinguisher and a CO₂ unit is the difference between a fire response and a fatality. That is what class E fire safety comes down to.
What is a class E fire?
A class E fire is a fire involving electrically energised equipment such as wiring, control panels, motors, computers, and servers where the active electrical supply creates an electrocution risk. That risk rules out water, foam, or any conductive extinguishing agent.
A class E fire is a fire involving electrically energised equipment where the live electrical supply creates an electrocution hazard that prevents the use of water, foam, or any conductive extinguishing agent.
One fact separates class E from every other fire class. The classification applies only while the equipment is energised. Cut the power and confirm it is off, and the fire becomes a class A fire burning plastic and insulation or a class B fire if transformer oil is involved. The electrical hazard disappears with the power.
How electrical fires start: three ignition mechanisms explained
Mechanism 1: Overload and sustained resistive heating (Joule’s law)
Current flowing through a conductor produces heat. Joule’s law states that heat output equals I²R, current squared multiplied by resistance. Double the current and heat output quadruples.
When too much current flows through an undersized cable from an overloaded extension lead, too many appliances on one circuit, or wiring that was never rated for the load, heat builds faster than the cable can shed it. The insulation reaches its temperature limit, degrades, and ignites.
This process is slow. The cable may run hot for hours or days before ignition. There is no arc, no spark, no warning sound. Just sustained heat until something burns.
Mechanism 2: Arc fault, the invisible fire starter
An arc fault is an unintended electrical discharge between two conductors or between a conductor and earth. The plasma arc it produces exceeds 3,000°C, hotter than the surface of the sun. It ignites anything within reach including cable insulation, timber framing, and dust on cable trays.
Arc faults happen at loose connections, corroded terminals, damaged insulation, and pinched cables. The most dangerous type is a series arc fault, a recurring, brief arc at a damaged point. Standard circuit breakers (MCBs) do not detect series arc faults because the average current may be within normal range. The breaker sees nothing wrong. The arc continues.
Mechanism 3: Electrical tracking on contaminated insulation
Electrical tracking explains many electrical panel fires that appear to start for no reason.
When moisture or conductive contamination such as dust, salt, or chemical residue deposits on an insulating surface, a small leakage current begins flowing across that surface. The current heats the path. Heat carbonises the insulation. Carbon is conductive, so more current flows, more heat is generated, and the carbonised path extends further.
Over weeks or months this becomes a permanent conductive channel that sustains arcing and eventually ignites the surrounding material. It is entirely invisible from outside the enclosure until fire or smoke appears.
Why class E fires are uniquely dangerous
The electrocution hazard: why water kills
Water conducts electricity. At 1,000V, a water stream can deliver a fatal shock to the operator at up to 1 metre from the point of contact. At higher voltages such as industrial switchgear and substation equipment, the safe standoff distance is far greater.
A class E fire fought with a water extinguisher is immediately life threatening to the firefighter. Water is not just ineffective on a class E fire. It is a direct threat to the person holding it.
Toxic smoke from burning electrical materials
Electrical fire smoke is not generic smoke. When electrical equipment burns, specific toxic gases form depending on what is on fire:
• PVC cable insulation produces hydrogen chloride (HCl)
• Polycarbonate and ABS plastic housings produce hydrogen cyanide (HCN), benzene, and styrene
• Printed circuit boards (PCBs) produce hydrogen bromide (HBr) and potentially dioxins
• Transformer oil produces acrolein and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
• Rubber insulation produces sulphur dioxide (SO₂)
The combination of HCl and HCN reaches toxic concentrations quickly in an enclosed room.
The speed of spread through cable infrastructure
An electrical fire can travel along cable trays, trunking, and conduit at significant speed. A fire starting at a distribution board can reach every floor connected to that board through the vertical cable risers within minutes.

