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Standards

Lightning protection: SS 555 & IEC 62305.

Singapore is one of the most lightning-prone places on Earth — and the standards that govern protection of structures here aren't optional checklists. They are quantitative frameworks. Here's how they work.

Why this matters in Singapore

Singapore sits in the lightning belt of South-East Asia. Tropical convective storms generate ground-flash densities estimated at around 15 strikes per square kilometre per year — among the highest measured anywhere. Every roof, every antenna, every electrical service entering a building has a measurable annual exposure to lightning that has to be managed.

The standards used in Singapore — SS 555, closely aligned with the international standard IEC 62305 — give us a structured way to quantify that exposure, set a tolerable level of risk, and design protection to bring the residual risk below that tolerance.

The standards, in four parts

SS 555 and IEC 62305 are organised in four parts, each addressing a distinct aspect of lightning protection:

PartTitleWhat it covers
Part 1General principlesLightning phenomenon, parameters, damage categories
Part 2Risk managementQuantitative risk assessment, tolerable risk, required LPL
Part 3Physical damage and life hazardExternal LPS, internal LPS for physical damage
Part 4Electrical and electronic systemsLightning Protection Zones, SPDs, shielding, bonding

Risk assessment (Part 2)

The starting point of every compliant lightning protection design is a quantitative risk assessment. This is not a tick-the-box exercise — it is a calculation that produces a number, and that number determines the level of protection required.

Four risk categories are assessed:

  • R1 — risk of loss of human life.
  • R2 — risk of loss of service to the public.
  • R3 — risk of loss of cultural heritage.
  • R4 — risk of economic loss.

Each risk is computed by summing contributions from direct strikes to the structure, direct strikes to connected services, indirect strikes (induced surges) near the structure, and indirect strikes near connected services. Each component depends on the strike frequency, the damage probability, and the loss factor for the relevant scenario.

Tolerable risk values are defined in the standard (e.g. R1 tolerable risk = 10⁻⁵ per year). If the calculated risk exceeds the tolerable value, protection measures are applied iteratively until residual risk is below tolerance.

The output of the assessment is the LPL. Lightning Protection Level — I (highest), II, III or IV — drops out of the risk calculation, not out of the designer's preference. A Level I building is something like a major infrastructure asset or a place of public assembly; Level IV is the default for ordinary low-occupancy structures.

The four Lightning Protection Levels

LPLPeak current capturedRolling sphere radiusMesh size
I200 kA20 m5 × 5 m
II150 kA30 m10 × 10 m
III100 kA45 m15 × 15 m
IV100 kA60 m20 × 20 m

External LPS (Part 3)

The external lightning protection system has three components — air termination, down conductor, earth termination.

Air termination

The job of the air termination is to capture the lightning strike at a controlled point on the structure. Three methods are recognised:

  • Rolling sphere method — geometric construction; an imaginary sphere of radius equal to the LPL value is rolled over the structure. Any surface the sphere touches is exposed; any point of contact must be protected by an air terminal.
  • Mesh method — used for flat roofs; a grid of conductors at the LPL-specified mesh size.
  • Protective angle method — historical, simpler, applied where geometry permits.

The standard does not endorse Early Streamer Emission (ESE) air terminals as a substitute for conventional air terminations. ESE products live under separate (and contested) regional standards.

Down conductor

Down conductors carry the lightning current safely from the air termination to the earth. Number and spacing are LPL-dependent — for LPL I, typical spacing is 10 m; for LPL IV, 20 m. They may be dedicated conductors or "natural" down conductors using reinforcing steel of the structure where compliance can be demonstrated.

Earth termination

The earth termination disperses the lightning current into the ground. Two arrangements are recognised:

  • Type A — individual vertical or horizontal electrodes at the base of each down conductor.
  • Type B — a ring conductor or foundation earth, more common for larger structures.

Internal LPS (Part 4)

Inside the structure, the goal is to prevent the lightning current — or the induced voltages — from reaching sensitive equipment. The principles are:

  • Equipotential bonding. All metallic services entering the structure are bonded at the entry point to a Main Earth Bar, eliminating dangerous voltage differences.
  • Separation distance. Where bonding is not possible (e.g. between the LPS and isolated equipment), a calculated separation distance prevents flashover.
  • Lightning Protection Zones (LPZ). The interior is divided into zones — LPZ 0A (direct strike, full current), LPZ 0B (no direct strike), LPZ 1 (partial currents), LPZ 2 (further attenuated) and so on. SPDs are placed at each zone boundary to step the surge down.
  • Shielding. Use of the structure's reinforcing or dedicated shielding to attenuate magnetic fields from a nearby strike.

SPD coordination

Surge Protective Devices (SPDs) are the gates between Lightning Protection Zones. They divert surge current to earth and clamp residual voltage to a level the downstream equipment can survive.

  • Type 1 SPDs — at the service entrance (LPZ 0A to LPZ 1). High discharge current capacity (typically 12.5–25 kA per pole, 10/350 μs).
  • Type 2 SPDs — at the sub-distribution boards (LPZ 1 to LPZ 2). Lower discharge capacity (8/20 μs waveform), tighter clamp voltage.
  • Type 3 SPDs — at sensitive equipment (LPZ 2 to LPZ 3). Fine-tuning for electronics.

SPDs must be coordinated — Type 1 must operate first and absorb the bulk of the surge; Type 2 takes the residual; Type 3 trims the final waveform. A mis-coordinated SPD chain may leave Type 2 absorbing energy beyond its rating.

Frequently asked questions

Do all buildings in Singapore need an LPS?

Not all — but most. The risk assessment makes the determination. Building types likely to require protection include high-occupancy buildings, schools, healthcare facilities, fuel/chemical storage, telecoms, broadcast and most industrial facilities.

How long does a lightning risk assessment take?

For a typical commercial or industrial building, the risk assessment can be completed within a few engineering days once building data is available. Larger or unusual structures may take longer.

What about Early Streamer Emission (ESE) air terminals?

SS 555 / IEC 62305 are conventional (Franklin / rolling sphere / mesh) standards. ESE products operate under separate standards that are not universally accepted. A risk-assessed conventional design is the defensible engineering choice.

Are SPDs required even without an external LPS?

Frequently yes — surge protection at the service entrance is good practice for any building with sensitive electronics, even where direct-strike protection is not mandated. The risk assessment will identify whether surge-only protection is sufficient or whether full external LPS is needed.