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Hidden Fire Hazard: Abandoned Cable
Abandoned cable in plenum space may be out of sight, but
it shouldn’t be out of mind. In a fire, it could be dangerous
Thanks to computers and modern communications equipment, offices today are more
productive and often handle complex data in seconds. However, tucked into the
ceiling plenum above the unsuspecting heads of busy workers and corporate
executives lurks a hidden hazard which can produce toxic gases under fire
conditions.
That hazard is communications cabling. More specifically, it is the
plastic that insulates and jackets the copper wiring inside that poses a
problem.
According to industry estimates, approximately 84 billion feet of communications
cabling exists in ceiling plenums in the United States. Much of it is abandoned,
replaced by newer, faster-transmitting cables. This abandoned cabling, snaking
through the air plenums of the building’s HVAC system, adds significantly to the
fire load of the building. When the average building is re-cabled, the existing
cable generally is left in place, so the problem keeps building.
Fire Safety
The fire concern is not the 22- or 24-gauge copper, but the
plastic cable insulation and jacketing. A plenum that is packed with cabling
can create the same fuel load as gasoline. But fire is not the
only problem. The plastics also release toxic smoke in a fire. The fire doesn’t
necessarily ignite the cabling jackets immediately, but the heat can cause it to
release clear or white gases that are nearly undetectable. These gases can be
blinding or halt the respiratory system.
Plenum rated cabling will start burning in 35 to 40 seconds to a couple of
minutes. Currently, there’s no smoke-developed criteria for
plenum-rated cable, no fuel load standard, no toxicity standard and no acid
level requirements.”
What’s burning? Most of the weight in abandoned cabling is plastic. it is estimated
that a 1,000
feet of four-pair unshielded twisted pair cable weighs about 30 pounds — 10
pounds of copper and 20 pounds of plastic jacketing and insulation. When those cables are installed in a plenum, exposure to airflow makes the risk
of fire and smoke spread especially dangerous. Insulated, jacketed cabling releases gases that, when they come in contact with
any moisture, including humidity, form hydrofluoric acid, it is so strong that it eats glass.”
Another health issue involved in abandoned cabling is the lead content found in
plenum cabling jacketed with fire resistant polyvinyl chloride because it contains lead stabilizers and plasticizers.
Often, the manufacturers put in lead — 7 to 10 percent by weight since it doesn’t cost more and when lead gets hot it acts like a lubricant. But as
PVC breaks down, it can release lead dust, and that lead dust can be
blowing around the building and raining in amounts reaching 25,000 parts per
million, because PVC breaks down pretty fast. The Environmental Protection
Agency limits lead exposure to 220 parts per million.
Code Requirements
The problem of abandoned cabling is serious but continues to be
overlooked, and codes are just beginning to address the problem.
Because abandoned cable represents combustible loading, the National Electrical
Code (NEC) in its 2002 and 2005 editions requires the removal of accessible
portions.
In general, the NEC defines abandoned cable as installed cable that is not
terminated at both ends at equipment other than a connector and not identified
for future use with a tag.Within those articles, subsections
related to spread of fire or products of combustion say, in effect, that the
accessible portion of abandoned communications cables shall not be permitted to remain. This
is true in both the 2002 and 2005 editions of the NEC.

Other codes or standards besides NEC also may apply to abandoned cable. For
example, NFPA 90A, the standard for installation of air conditioning and
ventilation systems, does set some parameters that are to be met in plenum
spaces. NFPA 76 covers fire protection of telecommunication facilities and NFPA
75 is the standard for electronic computer and data processing equipment. But
the one that is most likely to result in removing this hidden hazard remains the
electrical code.
Exceptions
Under NEC’s newer versions, the accessible portions of abandoned cable must be
removed with few exceptions. If they are tagged for future use, for example,
they can remain. However, the code is not that specific on what
constitutes appropriate tagging.
Abandoned cable also may be left in place if it cannot be removed without
causing “building structural issues.
Whether unused cable needs to be removed depends on the code enforced in the
local community. Even if appropriate NEC codes are embraced by a particular
community. enforcement may be lax.
One reason the codes aren’t enforced on this matter is that cities often are
still wrestling with clearing their properties of abandoned cable since pulling
abandoned cable from plenums is extremely labor-intensive. Often the cabling
gets interlaced and wound around each other so there’s a good possibility you
could pull out the working one, too.

So, even if the area is covered by the appropriate NEC code editions, often the
only time abandoned cable will be addressed is during a major wall-to-wall
renovation. At that time, electrical inspectors are clearing new wiring and
reissuing or denying certificates of occupancy.
But the concern for the potential hazards abandoned cabling presents is growing.
A number of municipalities are beginning to address the abandoned cable issue,
including Atlanta, Denver, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Seattle.
Another issue that clouds the abandoned cable controversy is responsibility. Is
the building owner responsible for removing abandoned cable? Is it the tenant
who abandoned the cabling? Who is expected to pay to correct this growing
hazard? The experts agree that no one really knows yet.
NEC establishes the performance issue,it tells what has to be removed. But the
code does not assign responsibility for that removal. Whether the contractor,
the building owner or someone else removes the cabling is not a code issue. The
inspector for the jurisdiction will indicate what needs to be removed before the
building can pass its electrical inspection.
Best practice for owners is to make sure they have a thorough, professional
assessment to give them a good understanding of what the current state of
liability is and clean up that space as budgets and moves/adds/changes allow. From that point forward, leases can include verbiage that requires
the tenants to deal with future cabling.

Once abandoned cable is removed, building owners must also consider options for
environmentally responsible disposal.. Some of the plastics, as well as the
metal, in cabling materials can be reclaimed for reuse, thereby reducing the
large amount of plastics that are disposed of in landfills or incinerated.
Leased Space Issues
Multi-tenant property management, vendor operations and tenant
turnover are challenging the real estate industry to be specific about who is
responsible for what, when and how.
Both the Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) International and the
National Association of Industrial and Office Parks are working on lease
rewrites to address the abandoned cable issue.
In a typical high rise office, the building owner probably will be responsible
for backbone network cabling, which is usually installed in vertical risers to
tenant office suites. The network distribution cable from the tenant’s
communication room to its workstations, however, may be the tenant’s
responsibility, depending on how the lease is written.

Until recently, it was not common for owners to explicitly require the removal
of abandoned cable of their tenants, It is likely that disputes between tenants
and owners over responsibility for cable removal will become more common, and
that new leases will have removal requirements.
Another way to approach the issue of abandoned cable is for
facility executives and building owners to consider cabling an asset. You can
see cable as trash or treasure. If you see it as a building utility that you
supply and charge your tenants for, then you have a revenue stream.
When cable needs servicing, the building owner or property manager would provide
that maintenance or improvement. It’s not being done today, but I think it
could be built into the lease or offered as an add-on service.
Although there is a cost to removing abandoned cable, the emphasis should not be
on monetary considerations. Abandoned cable really is a life safety issue and
it needs to be removed.
CODES CATCHING UP
Growth Of A Problem
No one anticipated the volume of abandoned cable that is found in a typical
office building today. Technology drove cabling to change as processing speeds
increased and there was more demand to move information faster. Category 3
cabling was followed by Category 5 cabling, then Category 5e, and so on. Because
there was no rule saying that the old cable needed to be removed, often it was
simply left in place.
By the time the codes began catching up to the problem, so much cable was
tangled in the average office building’s plenum that no one really wanted to
address it. In fact, buildings in localities still using the 1999 edition of the
National Electrical Code are not required to remove unused cabling, no matter
how much it may be interrupting the flow of air in HVAC plenum spaces or
weighing down suspended ceilings.

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