Most facilities treat a lightning protection study as a site inspection. It’s not. A lightning protection study is a structured risk calculation. It produces numerical risk values, not a visual take on what’s already installed. The output is compared against a tolerable threshold, defined by global standards.
Knowing what the study calculates gives you the basis for a sound protection decision. This article will help you know when a study is truly required and what protection level your facility needs. You can then rank protection spending across multiple structures, so you don’t pay for work you don’t need.
Main Takeaways
- A lightning protection study calculates numerical risk values using structure data and lightning density.
- The study shows whether your facility needs protection and at what level. Calculated risk is compared against a tolerable threshold set by global standards.
- The IEC 62305 2024 update reduced risk parts and changed the lightning density metric from Ng to Nsg. This affects all prior work.
- A study cost depends on structure count, complexity, required standard, location, and whether the work is part of a larger project.
- Software-driven platforms cut assessment time from 25+ hours of manual spreadsheet work to about one hour. Full standards compliance is maintained.
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What a Lightning Protection Study Involves
A lightning protection study is an engineering risk calculation. It shows whether your facility needs a lightning protection system and, if so, at what protection level. An engineer feeds structure data, occupancy type, and lightning density into a standard formula. The output determines whether risk exceeds a tolerable threshold.
This differs from a lightning protection survey. The survey is a physical walkthrough that records existing site conditions. When standards change or systems age, you need a lightning protection test or inspection. This checks whether your installed lightning protection system still meets standards.
The study follows a set sequence:
- You provide structure sizes, occupancy details, and site location.
- The engineer runs the risk calculation: shielding analysis, grounding and bonding review, and SPD test. They generate the report from the results.
- You receive a set of risk values, protection level picks, and compliance records tied to the relevant standard.
Shielding, Grounding, and Protection Components
Every study covers six core elements:
- Shielding analysis: Uses the Rolling Sphere Method. It checks whether air terminals and conductors cover the full structure. The method traces a sphere of a set radius across every surface. Where the sphere touches, that area is exposed and needs protection.
- Down conductor assessment: Reviews the paths that route captured lightning current from air terminals to the grounding system. The study defines routing, spacing, and conductor count based on the required protection level.
- Grounding and bonding review: Confirms the earth network can absorb lightning energy safely. This covers electrode layout, soil resistivity, and equipotential bonding of every metallic service entering the structure.
- Surge Protection Device (SPD) selection: Finds the right SPD type and placement at service entry points. This prevents conducted surges from damaging sensitive gear on internal circuits.
What the Risk Calculation Produces
The risk calculation sits at the centre of every lightning protection study. It takes measured inputs and converts them into numerical risk values.
Those inputs include:
- Each structure’s height, length, and width
- Ground strike-point density (Nsg). This counts how many lightning strikes hit per km2 per year at your location
- Occupancy type
- The value of contents
- Types of internal systems
Under IEC 62305-2:2024, the calculation produces two risk parts. R1 covers the risk of injury or death to people in or near the structure. R2 covers the risk of harm to key public services such as power, communications, or water supply.
Each value is measured against a tolerable threshold set by the standard. When R1 or R2 exceeds its threshold, the study names the protection measures and protection level needed to bring risk within safe limits. If neither exceeds the threshold, the study records that no added protection is required.
LRA Plus™ handles this entire calculation. What used to require 25+ hours of manual spreadsheet work now takes about an hour using our lightning risk assessment software. The math still follows the explicit standard, but the tool manages the complexity so engineers can focus on reading results.
The finished study report covers:
- Risk calculation results for each part
- Shielding design picks with protection level
- Grounding and bonding specs
- SPD placement guidance
- A standards compliance statement citing the relevant edition
This is the document your insurer, regulator, or EPC client reviews. It arrives as a structured report (PDF or equal format), not a verbal take. Because the output is a number measured against a defined threshold, the protection decision is traceable and sound. That’s what sets a study apart from a judgement call.
What the Latest Update Means for Your Facility
Three standards govern lightning protection studies worldwide:
- NFPA 780-2023 Annex L applies to US facilities.
- IEC 62305-2 is the global standard used across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and most other markets.
- BS EN 62305 is the UK’s national adoption of IEC 62305.
BSI recently published an updated 2024 framework (BS EN IEC 62305-2:2024), making it the current UK benchmark. It sets what your lightning protection study must produce:
- Calculation method
- Required inputs
- Compliance records
Lightning protection testing requirements, the periodic inspections of installed systems, are covered in parts 3 and 4 of these standards.
What Changed in IEC 62305-2:2024 Edition 3
Edition 3 brought three changes that affect every existing assessment:
- Risk parts reduced to two. R3 (loss of cultural heritage) and R4 (loss of economic value) were removed from the formal framework. Only R1 and R2
- The lightning density metric changed from Ng to Nsg. Nsg is ground strike-point density. It measures actual impact points per km2 per year. It’s a more precise input than the older flash density metric (Ng). Any tool or spreadsheet still using Ng follows the old method.
- Thunderstorm warning systems were added to the risk framework. Systems that meet IEC 62793 are now treated as a protection measure within the calculation itself.
If your facility’s study was done under IEC 62305-2:2010, its risk values may not match the current standard’s inputs and thresholds. Reviewing them against the 2024 framework is worth the effort. LRA Plus supports both the 2010 and 2024 editions of IEC 62305-2. Teams can run assessments under either version and compare results directly.
Lightning Protection Study Costs
Five scope factors drive the lightning protection study cost. Knowing them before you request a quote helps you budget well and avoid paying for work your facility doesn’t need.
- Number of structures: A single-building assessment is simple. A 30-structure industrial campus grows the calculation work and report scope in proportion.
- Structure complexity: A basic warehouse needs fewer inputs than a petrochemical facility with multiple zones, hazardous materials, and sensitive control systems.
- Standard required: IEC 62305-2 and NFPA 780 use different calculation methods. Facilities across borders sometimes need dual-standard assessments.
- Location: Sites in high flash density regions need more detailed lightning data inputs. UK national density averaged 0.0726 cloud-to-ground flashes per km² in 2024, per Météorage, but local hotspots run much higher.
- Project context: A separate study for an existing facility costs less than one that’s part of a FEED or EPC project. There, the assessment must fit broader engineering timelines and outputs.
UK insurers paid a record £585 million in weather-linked household claims in 2024, according to the Association of British Insurers. A lightning protection study costs a fraction of the loss exposure it measures. It’s a decision-making investment, not an overhead line item.
Re-check 2010 Studies Against 2024 Requirements
Re-run your IEC 62305-2:2010 study using 2024 inputs and see how R1 and R2 shift. Generate an audit-ready report without manual spreadsheets.
Make Lightning Protection Decisions with Confidence Using Skytree Scientific
Skytree Scientific automates the IEC 62305-2 and NFPA 780 risk calculations described in this article. Instead of weeks of manual spreadsheet work, engineering teams get sound, standards-compliant reports in hours. Multi-structure assessments don’t need enterprise software budgets. Facility managers receive audit-ready records that hold up in compliance reviews and insurance talks.
See how Skytree Scientific supports teams through the full lightning risk assessment process. Try LRA Plus free for 14 days and run your first standards-compliant assessment without manual calculations.
FAQs about Lightning Protection Studies
What happens if my risk calculation shows R1 or R2 below the tolerable threshold?
When both R1 and R2 fall below their tolerable thresholds, no added lightning protection is required for that structure. A formal report with calculation results and a compliance statement is still produced. This sound “no protection required” finding supports insurance talks, regulatory reviews, and future project scoping.
Can I run a lightning protection study for multiple structures in one assessment?
Yes, a single study can assess multiple structures on the same site. However, each structure needs its own risk calculation; dimensions, occupancy, and exposure differ. Multi-structure studies are common for industrial campuses, solar farms, and utility substations. Report scope grows with structure count.
Does lightning risk assessment software replace the need for a lightning protection engineer?
No, the software runs the IEC 62305-2 or NFPA 780 calculations and creates the report. An engineer still defines the inputs, reads the results, and names protection measures. Platforms like LRA Plus handle the repeated calculations and produce the compliance records. Assessment time drops from 25+ hours to about one hour. The engineer provides structure data, occupancy details, and site context. They then review risk values for accuracy.



