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Nfpa 30 Ppt -

Flammable and combustible liquids are the leading cause of catastrophic industrial fires. A generic "Fire Safety" slideshow won’t cut it. A dedicated NFPA 30 PPT allows you to:


  • Does NOT apply to:
  • Slide 1: Title Slide

    Slide 2: Agenda

    Slide 3: Learning Objectives


    This is often the most violated section of the code. Your slides should cover:

    Your NFPA 30 PPT should not exist in isolation. OSHA’s standard 29 CFR 1910.106 is directly based on NFPA 30. Mention this overlap:

    Slide suggestion: A split-screen with NFPA 30 on the left and OSHA 1910.106 on the right, highlighting identical requirements. nfpa 30 ppt

    Creating a comprehensive NFPA 30 PPT is not about copying the code onto slides. It is about translating legal requirements into watchfulness. A well-executed presentation reduces fire risk, prevents regulatory citations, and most importantly, ensures your team goes home safe every night.

    Whether you build from scratch or adapt an existing template, remember: The best slides are those that spark conversation. End every major section with the question: "Does our facility currently meet this requirement? If not, what will we change?"


    NFPA 30 has strict limits on how much liquid you can store outside a protected building or safety cabinet. Your PPT should highlight the "Maximum allowable size per container." Flammable and combustible liquids are the leading cause

    The "Control Area" Concept: This is often the most confusing part of NFPA 30. Your PPT must explain that a "control area" is a fire-resistive space where max quantities are limited (e.g., 120 gallons of Class IB per control area). Safety cabinets double these limits.

    Your first slides must clarify the "alphabet soup" of liquid classes. If your audience doesn't know the difference between Class IA and Class IIIB, the rest of the presentation fails.

  • Combustible Liquid (Class II & III): Flash point at or above 100°F.
  • PPT Tip: Use a color-coded thermometer graphic here. Red for Flammable (low flash point), Yellow for Combustible. Does NOT apply to:

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