IS it necessary to upsize the EGC size for multiple sets as the schedule below calls for. I also suspect that in some cases the upsizing in the EGC may require larger conduit. I thought the EGC was based on OCPD size. I have 7 sets of feeder 380B. So I guess I would need #250 or 500 EGC thus I don;t think 3-1/2" conduit would work for 4 #500.
View attachment 2580360
		 
		
	 
 First of all there is no x7 column for the EGC on the chart.
Second based on 7 sets one could assume AL conductors.  7 x 310 ( 500 al@75c)=2170. May have missed copper conductor some where.
Based on that I would go to 250.122 and see what size requires for the 2000 amp OCPD.  This would require a 250 cu or 400 AL. That would be 3- 500 AL and 1- 400 AL  in each raceway.  Assuming thhn/ thwn conductors this would easily fits in a 3.5" raceway. The feeder, P380B shows 3-500 + EGC.
Table 4, 3.5" emt@100%=11.545 in²
Table 5,
500 thhn, .7073 in² x 3= 2.1219 in²
400 thhn ( EGC) .5863
2.1219+.5863= 2.7082 in²
2.7082/11.545= .23457 or 23.457% fill 
Way under the over 2 wires 40% fill allowence.
At 4-500s it's still way under 40% fill.
4 x .7073= 2.8292/11.545= .25049 or 25%
Also annex C shows 6-500s in a 3.5" emt,
guessed emt. Worse case sch 80 pvc it shows 5- 500s
If the wire was CU than the engineer or the NEC  could require a larger than 250 cu EGC in each raceway depending on year of code.
If an increase is required, using CU it would take a 400 CU EGC.
7 x 500= 3500 mcm ( shown on plans)
7 x 350 = 2450 mcm (minimum required)
250x(3500/2450)= 357.14 mcm
2000/7= 285.71, 350 mcm @75 c = 310 amps. 
310 x 7= 2,170 amps.
285 x 7= 1,995 amps
Can not use 300 @285 you must round up to the next size. 
So I would ask the engineer AL or CU and what size of EGC for the seven sets.