The more I think about it -the whole grounding/earthing concept seems like a combination of wishful thinking and voodoo reasoning.
I like that.
I'll use it to explain why we only need two spikes in a sand pit to comply with the NEC's grounding requirements.
Understanding the science is easy. It's the reasoning that throws most of us for a loop.
My inspector pal and I talk about this stuff all the time. The ONLY thing that earthing has accomplished to any reasonable level at all is providing a voltage reference.
That's it. The NEC's earthing requirements do little if anything to clear faults, prevent shocks or protect us from lightning.
It's the NEC's bonding requirements that lead us (for the most part) to safety.
What I don't understand is why we would want to increase harmful voltages intentionally.
Think about this. We (theoretically) install a service in a structure with a basement but make no connection to ground at the service. The only connection to the ground is at the pig, some 300 feet away, and it's just a single ground rod.
What would the available fault potential be? Think about working in a finished wood structure. Do you get a shock when you grab a bare hot wire and are not touching any other metal? No? That is because of the resistance between your feet and the neutral is very high because of the vinyl, wood, etc.
Down in the basement there will be some resistance between the floor and the neutral, too. Usually it's much less and it's easy to get poked. Without ground rods at our theoretical service, we get to include 300 feet of earth in series with an old single ground rod for our total resistance.
Now we decide to comply with the NEC and poke two rods in the ground right next to the basement wall. Are we not decreasing the resistance between the concrete floor and the neutral by doing so? And, by doing so providing MORE available fault current if a person completes a path from the floor to the hot wire?
I think that question is the best argument for a prudent explanation of earthing requirements.
If we did away with all earth connections, the worst thing that would happen would be that we would lose our voltage reference. Other things would happen, too, but losing that reference would be a bad, bad thing. In most cases, people wouldn't even notice that their system was not connected to the earth.