Electrical Interference: Electrical cables can produce electromagnetic interference (EMI) which can potentially disrupt the signal integrity of fiber optic cables, although fiber optics are inherently resistant to EMI, the components at either end may not be. Could someone knowledgeable explain why fiber optics could or could not be used for power transmission large or small? The formula for power in optical fiber is shown below. X is photons per second, lambda is wavelength, light speed is c (speed of light is reduced significantly in fiber ~30%. General Consideration: It is generally not recommended to run fiber optic cables in the same conduit as electrical power cables. This is due to several potential risks and complications that can arise from such an arrangement. My original plan was to trench new conduit and run CAT8, but given that the existing run is all "customer side" and installed by the former. The main problem is accessing/maintaining the fibers later if there is a dig-in or other problems. There are no technical concerns. If this is an industrial facility where all maintenance is the responsibility of one entity, I wouldn't have too many concerns, but I would think about ways of. When optical fibers are within the same composite cable for electric light, power, Class 1, non?power-limited fire alarm, or medium-power network-powered broadband communications circuits operating at 600 volts or less, they shall be permitted to be installed only where the functions of the optical. Utilities build fiber optic networks in similar ways that others build them, aerial and underground, but they also mix aerial cables in their power distribution cables, sharing towers and poles.