Nor was any consideration apparent given to the increased risk of electric shock which presumably arises from surrounding the innards of a CU with earthed metal - at least, in the hands of people who do silly or incautious things (and there are a good few of them around!).The actual cause of the fires and whether it started in or was caused by the consumer unit was not considered. .... Neither was the fact that plastic consumer units have been routinely installed in their millions for several decades and the apparent increase in fires occurred only recently. .... Or the kind of property they were installed in, whether the electrical system had been installed properly, had it been tampered with, inspected recently or at all, etc.

I think it's basically the 80:20 role at work. There's no need to go straight to perfection. At least now there's less likely bits of melted cu dripping all over whatever people have stored up against their cu.there is no requirement for 'fire containment'. It seems that, provided the case is made of the mythical 'non-combustible' material, it can have as many holes in it as IP considerations will allow.
The actual cause of the fires and whether it started in or was caused by the consumer unit was not considered.
Neither was the fact that plastic consumer units have been routinely installed in their millions for several decades and the apparent increase in fires occurred only recently.
What is the reason that consumer units need to be made of metal rather than plastic as they were a few years ago?
Yes, but what they actually did is about as far from perfection as one can imagine. The suggestion (the publicised evidence for which appears weak) was that an increasing number of house fires were originating within CUs. If that is what one believes, the the need is for fire containment - which the new reg has not asked for.I think it's basically the 80:20 role at work. There's no need to go straight to perfection. ...
I didn't mean to suggest that IP rating had anything to do with fire. My point was that, so long as the CU case (however much of it still existed!) was made of a 'non-combustible' material, it could have as many (uncovered) holes in it (for flames to escape through) as were permissible in terms of Ingress Protection.And actually the IP rating is just for ingress not fire, so you can have a massive hole and just cover it in trunking ....
The people who write the regulations DGAS about that.I'm not even convinced that, in the long-term, it will actually result in a net reduction in deaths of serious injuries.
They presumably must 'care', since otherwise they wouldn't even be bothering to write regulations which are intended to be safety-related. However, it seems that they are 'easily led'/bullied/whatever, not to mention the commercial interests which are represent amongst the 'authors'.The people who write the regulations DGAS about that.
No - if they really cared then they would do their job properly. Simply doing what someone else tells them will solve a problem without them applying any of their years of experience and training is neither caring nor proper.They presumably must 'care', since otherwise they wouldn't even be bothering to write regulations which are intended to be safety-related.
No - they just want an easy life.However, it seems that they are 'easily led'/bullied/whatever, not to mention the commercial interests which are represent amongst the 'authors'.
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