Emergency Action Plans
Preparing crews and sites to respond effectively to fires, severe weather, medical events, and other emergencies.
23+ Years in Safety
Experience across wind, solar, BESS, data centers, heavy civil, utilities, and industrial projects.
Aligned with OSHA / NFPA / EM 385 / ISO
Work built to OSHA 1910/1926, NFPA 70E, EM 385-1-1, and ISO 14001/45001/9001 frameworks.
Nationwide Coverage
United States projects with mobilization to Canada (Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan), Puerto Rico, and Mexico.
for Construction, Energy & Industrial Sites
An Emergency Action Plan defines how workers respond to incidents such as fires, severe weather, hazardous material releases, or medical emergencies. Our EAP services ensure each project complies with OSHA 1910.38 and EM 385 requirements, including evacuation routes, alarm systems, assembly points, and clear communication procedures for safe, organized response.
This program helps employers reduce confusion during emergencies, protect personnel, and keep operations audit-ready.
Emergency Response
Prepare your team to act fast during fires, medical incidents, and workplace emergencies. Learn essential response skills to keep everyone safe and compliant.
The Risks of Operating Without an Emergency Action Plan
When emergencies occur without a clear plan, sites face delayed evacuations, injuries, and noncompliance penalties.
What Goes Wrong Without Oversight
Emergency Action Plans
Fill out the form below, and our team will respond promptly with complete training details and next-step guidance.
for Renewable, Industrial & Construction Sites
We help develop and implement clear, compliant Emergency Action Plans that keep workers safe, operations organized, and communication effective during any emergency or crisis.
Partner with Renew Safety
Get answers to common questions about Emergency Action Plans.
Evacuation procedures, alarm systems, reporting methods, roles, and training documentation are required by OSHA 1910.38.
Drills should be performed at least annually—or more frequently on high-risk or multi-employer projects.
The Site Safety Manager or designated Safety Representative is responsible for keeping the plan updated and accessible.
Yes. EM 385-1-1 mandates inclusion of site maps, emergency contacts, and rescue coordination procedures.
Yes. EAPs can be adapted for construction, commissioning, or operational environments.