i believe there will likely never be a problem. but my first hand experience of seeing sparking grounded non current carrying parts because of the installations you are describing and hearing stories of people getting shocked from those installations effects my view. although its not likely to be a problem, i believe we should design for everything to fail safe and operate safe and the installation you are describing does not clearly satisfy that. i believe i have presented options that contradict your statement of the current being unavoidable.
i believe its possible the OPs original design is compliant if there is little to no neutral current on the electrical system. otherwise i believe it is a clear violation of the NEC and rightfully so.
you say objectionable current is non rigorously defined, i disagree in a few ways. first off just because something is non rigorously defined does not mean the code section is invalid, i would argue you therefore must error on the side of caution, not overlook the section. second
ob·jec·tion·a·ble
[əbˈjekSH(ə)nəb(ə)l]
ADJECTIVE
- arousing distaste or opposition; unpleasant or offensive.
objectionable current is the best language i can think of for that section, it's any current you really don't want, you say non rigorously defined, i say subjective but also that the NEC is not for untrained people or to be used as a design manual, it is a minimum standard for safety. in some instances 20 amps on normally non-current carrying equipment is fine(and code compliant), in others 1 amp could be disastrous. i think people need to consider the possible problems, again the NEC is not a design manual or for the untrained, it's a minimum standard. and the NEC is for practical safeguarding and i don't see how requiring the main bonding connections to be physically close is impractical when you look from the practical view that a utility such as electricity is a privilege not a right or necessity more important than the risk of losing life to be able to use. grouping them together is not hard, it costs more, if you want electricity or want to make money off installing electrical equipment in most of the states you are supposed to install things if erroring, on the side of caution. you don't have the right to have an electrical system you have the privilege of having one that is beyond any reasonable argument, safe, and will not on its own harm someone. if there's no danger in circulating current in the OPs situation then i agree its compliant, but i do not take his omission of details on that subject as a determinant in that question. instead of investigating if it is safe i would take the easier route and error on side of caution for the minimal extra cost, keeping in mind its all for only having something as beneficial/desired but not absolutely needed like electricity that kills 440 people in u.s. by residential fires alone every year, causes nearly 34,000 u.s. residential fires alone every year, killed more than 300 and injured more than 4,000 on the job each year in the u.s. alone every year between 2003 and 2007.
https://www.nfpa.org/News-and-Research/Data-research-and-tools/Electrical/Electrical
yeah, i'm concerned, but more of what i am trying to convey is in my opinion it is practical(when you consider what we are dealing with) to at least group them if you are going to have two bonds like that.
to your thought of them being at greater distances, my response is what i already said in this post that it is situation specific and my responses to the OP were of the mindset of "i wouldn't waste my time trying to figure out if there are absolutely no likely scenarios of this causing a problem, i would just group them(or the other options i presented". how would the enclosures being bolted and directly bonded together with their enclosures directly bonded to the main bonding connections pose a hazard? or are you considering them being just relatively close like say 10' apart, in that case i think if there is a big bonding jumper between them and no recognizable hazards for circulating current on the other metal in the area between them, like say a gas line or a jacuzzi, etc., i might think its okay but i would personally want them pretty much bolted together, being on opposite sides of a wall and a big bonding jumper between them would probably be okay i think depending on any other possible contributing factor or hazard. you saying "the further apart the better" makes me think you might actually recognize a possible hazard.
i will say i believe your view is more inline with what i would consider the more standard/prevalent view in the industry. but that doesn't change mine and i stand by what i have said. but am interested if you have anything else to add.
thanks
its a privilege not a right, and very dangerous, i say we build with that in mind and if we are going to error, error on the side of caution. that's why i have posted what i have, not because i believe someone will likely die or the place will likely burn down, but because i think those things are plausible to happen and easily avoidable with the recommendations i provided.