Commissioning is the systematic process of verifying and validating that a system, piece of equipment, or installation has been installed, tested, and operated in line with the design intent and the owner’s requirements. In short, commissioning proves that “what was built” truly works like “what was planned” before it is handed over for full operation.
This guide covers the meaning of commissioning, why it matters, how it differs from pre-commissioning and start-up, the project stages, a focus on electrical and panel commissioning, the main commissioning test types, and a practical checklist.
1. What Is Commissioning? (Meaning and Definition)
The commissioning meaning is, literally, “to bring into working order.” In engineering and industrial projects, commissioning is a structured set of activities that proves every component and the system as a whole:
- Is installed correctly per drawings and specifications.
- Is safe to energize and operate.
- Performs to design parameters under real operating conditions.
- Is documented so it can be maintained and audited later.
Commissioning is not simply “switching the equipment on.” It is the final quality-control process that bridges the construction phase and the operations phase.
2. Why Commissioning Matters
Without proper commissioning, a project risks being handed over with hidden defects that only surface under full load. The key benefits:
- Reliability: fewer early failures and less unexpected downtime.
- Safety: protection, grounding, and interlocks are proven before the system is loaded.
- Performance: efficiency and capacity are verified against the design promise.
- Compliance: standards and contract requirements are met with documented evidence.
- Cost efficiency: issues are fixed while still cheap to correct, not after operations begin.
3. Pre-Commissioning, Commissioning, and Start-up
These three terms are often confused. The sequence is:
- Pre-commissioning: static checks before the system is energized or pressurized, for example cable continuity, terminal tightness, cleanliness, and insulation testing.
- Commissioning: dynamic testing as the system is gradually activated, verifying function by function.
- Start-up: the system runs under normal operating conditions and is monitored for stability before handover.
4. The Project Commissioning Process
Here are the typical stages of the commissioning process on an industrial project:
- Planning: prepare the commissioning plan, scope, schedule, and team responsibilities.
- Installation inspection: verify the physical work against as-built drawings, specifications, and standards.
- Pre-commissioning: static testing (insulation, continuity, instrument calibration).
- Functional test: test each function under controlled conditions.
- Integrated/system test: test the integrated system, including interlocks and emergency scenarios.
- Performance test: verify capacity and efficiency at operating load.
- Documentation and handover: compile reports, punch list, manuals, and acceptance records.
5. Electrical Commissioning
Electrical commissioning is the commissioning process focused on electrical systems, from panels and cabling to protection and powered equipment. Typical electrical commissioning activities include:
- Insulation resistance and cable continuity testing.
- Verifying control and power wiring against the diagrams.
- Testing protection relays, settings, and coordination.
- Functional testing of interlocks, indications, and alarms.
- Staged energization and parameter measurement.
Correct wiring is the foundation of reliability. A small error in a termination or polarity can cause a major fault under load.
6. Panel and Power System Commissioning
Panel commissioning (including control panels, MCCs, ATS, and solar panels) confirms that each panel works according to its control logic. Test focus:
- Distribution panels and MCCs: protection, busbars, and wiring.
- ATS (Automatic Transfer Switch): automatic source transfer between the grid, generator, or solar runs smoothly without disturbing critical loads.
- Solar / PV panels: verify the inverter, DC/AC protection, and transfer logic.
7. Commissioning Test: Types and Purpose
A commissioning test is a structured test that proves each system function meets the acceptance criteria. Common types:
- Insulation Resistance Test: confirms cable and equipment insulation is adequate.
- Functional Test: verifies each function works per the control logic.
- FAT (Factory Acceptance Test): testing at the factory before shipment.
- SAT (Site Acceptance Test): testing on site after installation.
- Performance Test: verifies performance at operating load.
Each test has acceptance criteria and a result form that becomes part of the handover documentation.
8. Case Study: Generator and DSE Controller Commissioning
In generator commissioning, controllers such as DSE (Deep Sea Electronics) are configured and tested to confirm auto start, synchronization, protection, and load transfer all work correctly. Verification covers parameter settings, a grid-failure simulation, and a transfer-to-load test. Correct configuration ensures backup power is reliable when it is needed.
9. A Concise Commissioning Checklist
- ☐Commissioning plan and schedule approved.
- ☐Installation verified against drawings and specifications.
- ☐Pre-commissioning (insulation, continuity, calibration) completed and passed.
- ☐Functional test per function documented.
- ☐Integrated/system test and emergency scenarios passed.
- ☐Performance test meets the criteria.
- ☐Punch list closed, report and acceptance record signed.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is commissioning?
Commissioning is the systematic process of verifying and validating that a system or equipment operates as designed before handover.
What is the difference between pre-commissioning and commissioning?
Pre-commissioning is static testing before the system is energized, while commissioning is dynamic testing as the system is activated.
What is electrical commissioning?
Electrical commissioning is commissioning focused on electrical systems, covering insulation testing, wiring, protection, and staged energization.
What is a commissioning test?
A commissioning test is a structured test such as insulation testing, functional testing, FAT, and SAT that proves a system meets its acceptance criteria.
Need Industrial & Electrical Commissioning Services?
PT Surya Inovasi Prioritas (SURIOTA) provides commissioning services for electrical systems, panels, generators, and industrial IoT/SCADA integration, complete with test documentation.