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Apologies to plumbers of the forum who are undoubtably exceptions to this and will know that equipotential bonding exists to ensure that during an earth fault exposed metalwork will be at the same voltage as the earth and will act as an earth path thereby decreasing the time for the breaker to operate.
There's a great description of it on page 39-40 of this months professional electrician magazine. :-
https://professional-electrician.com/magĀazines/october-2023/
I read this like an HIGNFY answer.
There was a regulation change about 10 years ago which requires the main water and gas pipes to be bonded with a pretty chunky cable to the consumer unit. This has to be done within a short distance from their entry to the property. It's a pretty big deal for a lot of consumer unit upgrades because the utilities often enter the building a long way from the consumer unit and 10mm earth is not easy to hide. Hard to say what the bonding you have there is if it's not the main equipotential bonding but the installer might just hang one on there anyway because the joke is plumbers have no idea what equipotential bonding is anyway and they certainly can't spell it!
Apologies to plumbers of the forum who are undoubtably exceptions to this and will know that equipotential bonding exists to ensure that during an earth fault exposed metalwork will be at the same voltage as the earth and will act as an earth path thereby decreasing the time for the breaker to operate.
There's a great description of it on page 39-40 of this months professional electrician magazine. :-
https://professional-electrician.com/magazines/october-2023/