National Inspection Council for Electrical Installation Contracting explained

NICEIC
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Abbreviation:NICEIC
Formation:1956
Status:Voluntary Certification Body
Purpose:Certification of businesses
Headquarters:Warwick House, Houghton Hall Park
Location:Houghton Regis, Central Bedfordshire
Region Served:UK
Membership:Over 38,000 certified businesses
Leader Title:Managing Director
Leader Name:Richard Orton
Parent Organization:Certsure
Website:http://www.niceic.com

NICEIC is one of several organisations which assesses the competence of businesses undertaking electrical work in the UK. NICEIC is one of several providers given Government approval to offer Competent Person Schemes in England and Wales to oversee electrical work within the scope of Part P of the Building Regulations.

NICEIC also run certification schemes for plumbing, heating, renewables business as well as MCS and PAS certification schemes and has circa 38,000 businesses certified on its schemes, as well as being a leading industry training provider for electrical, gas, plumbing, heating, renewables qualifications.

Certsure LLP (which is owned by Electrical Safety First, a registered charity, and the Electrical Contractors’ Association (ECA), the electrotechnical industry trade body) trades under the certification brand of NICEIC.

History

From 1923, an earlier organisation, the National Register of Electrical Installation Contractors, kept a register of approved electrical contractors. It was incorporated on 10 August 1956.

Headquarters

The NICEIC is situated next to the headquarters of Costa Coffee and Whitbread, north of the main industrial estate Houghton Regis, which is near to Dunstable.

Certification

Businesses undertaking electrical work are certified by NICEIC to become Approved Contractors and/or Domestic Installers, meeting the NICEIC's scheme requirements for competence and the like kind. If work undertaken by the certified business is not up-to-standard, the NICEIC will correct it if necessary. Certified businesses are assessed by a team of local Assessors. Many local authorities only give work to NICEIC certified businesses.

To be a certified business undertaking electrical work, the business must:

See also

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