Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
e-Hazard is an arc flash and electrical safety training and services provider for industrial and utility sectors. Based on the collected content, its core offering is not just a single course platform, but a full set of safety and compliance services covering Arc Flash Safety Training, NFPA 70E training, OSHA 1910.269 utility training, audits, incident investigations, electrical safety program development, Arc Flash Study, short-circuit studies, coordination studies, and more.
Its course catalog is highly focused, mainly covering electrical work safety, low-voltage/high-voltage qualified personnel, NEC industrial installations, LOTO, EV electrical safety, electrical safety for managers, refresher training, and Train the Trainer programs. Delivery formats are fairly diverse, including public in-person classes, on-site corporate training, Live Web-Based Training, WebEx corporate courses, and Computer Based Training, but the text does not indicate any 1-on-1 format. Its positioning is closer to enterprise training and compliance implementation than general personal-interest learning.
Compliance is its main selling point. The pages clearly state that the training helps meet OSHA and NFPA 70E requirements, and it provides resources related to a Certificate Center and CEUs. However, the specific certificate names, exam format, validity period, and scope of international recognition are not disclosed. In terms of instructors, the website says its trainers include NFPA 70E experts, active contributors to standards, utility specialists, and NFPA 70E and IEEE-certified experts. Learner reviews also mention instructors with certified electrical safety expert backgrounds and years of field experience. For pricing, only “Request a Quote” is shown; fees for public classes or corporate training are not listed, so purchasing transparency is average.
Its strengths are its deep specialization, closed-loop coverage from training to audits and engineering studies, and close alignment with North American electrical safety regulations and standards, making it suitable for high-risk work environments. The drawbacks are limited public pricing information and incomplete certificate details. In addition, the main course language appears to be English; although Spanish course names appear, there is no sign of Chinese-language support. It is best suited for manufacturing, energy, utilities, facility operations and maintenance teams, electrical safety managers, and corporate training leaders.
Access from China cannot be determined from the available text, and payment methods are not disclosed. For Chinese companies with North American plants, multinational EHS systems, or a need to benchmark against OSHA/NFPA 70E, e-Hazard may offer strong value. If the requirement is only local compliance in China, it should be evaluated alongside GB/T, DL/T, emergency management authority requirements, and local safety training providers. Domestic alternatives may include continuing education for Certified Safety Engineers, EHS electrical safety in-house training providers, equipment vendor training, and local power safety standards courses.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on e-hazard.com official site.
e-hazard.com is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach e-hazard.com directly.