Yes, that pipe in the shot is the galv gas pipe from the floor, the gas meter is eye level. The customer pipe exists the left hand of the meter, out of shot to the left.
Thanks for clarifying. Am I the only person who feels that practices (and interpretation of the regs) regarding main bonding can get a bit crazy?...
...taking the worst-case scenario of a gas meter which does not provide electrical continuity (and no strapping across it), with the only main bonding being on the consumer's side of the meter, we have here a situation of several feet of a totally exposed extraneous-conductive-part (almost certainly at true earth potential) within inches of the cutout, meter and CU of a PME installation - the only slight 'saving grace' being that there is not, in this particular installation, an exposed MET at the PME "earth" potential.
Considering the purpose of Main Protective (Equipotential) Bonding, basic common sense suggests that, particularly in a situation such as that pictured, main bonding should be as close as possible to the point of entry of that e-c-p into the property, regardless of whether there is some insulation (e.g. a meter) between that point and the property's pipework. In that situation, there may well be arguments for
also bonding the property's pipework to the MET but (a) I don't think that really qualifies as main bonding and (b) to my mind it does not remove the common sense need to main bond the pipe on the service side of the meter (i.e. the actual extraneous-conductive-part).
I agree that the risks of bonding only on the consumer's side of the meter are often minimal, since the length of pipework on the service side of the meter is often very short and/or fairly inaccessible. However, we've been shown a picture of a situation in which that extraneous-conductive-part is relatively long, highly accessible and in close proximity (certainly within reaching distance of) to the installation's main components.
If that were my house, I would certainly want that pipe bonded to the MET, regardless of what else was bonded. Is that unreasonable?
Kind Regards, John.