Now take the case of a EGC. If there is a ground fault inside one of the conduits, a single EGC is carrying all of the fault current. A smaller sized EGC would be less likely to clear the fault in this case.
While there will only be one EGC on the shortest path back to the MBJ/SBJ, there will be other paths through the EGCs in the other conduits, which are tied together at both ends of the parallel runs.
Looking only at the parallel run of n conduits, if we call the impedance of the full length of one EGC in one conduit 1, then suppose we have a fault to one of the EGCs in one conduit at a fraction x of the length from the source end of the conduit, where x is in [0,1]. Then the impedance of the short path is x, and the impedance of the long path is (1-x) + 1/(n-1).
If I did the math right, the parallel impedance becomes x - (1-1/n) * x
2, and it takes on a maximum when x = 1/(2-2/n), where the impedance is 1/(4 - 4/n).
For n=2, the worst case is when the fault is at the supply end, and the impedance is 1/2, the impedance of the parallel EGCs. For n =3, the worst case is with the fault at 3/4 of the way to the load end, and the impedance is 3/8, greater than 1/3, the impedance of the parallel EGCs. For n=4, the worst case is with the fault at 2/3 of the way to the load end, and the impedance is 1/3, greater than 1/4, the impedance of the parallel EGCs. Etc.
So there is an effect, but it is no so large as to require an n-fold increase in total EGC cross section. For 2 conduits, no increase is required for the worst case impedance to be the same as the impedance for a fault at the load end of the conduits; for 3 conduits, a 9/8 upsizing factor would be required; for 4 conduits, a 4/3 upsizing factor would required, etc.
Cheers, Wayne