Yes, to add to what
@davesparks said - when you have the cable fed from the MCCB it should meet the disconnection time of 5s for the end Zs value just in case there is damage at any point along the cable. My earlier comment was just as he said - for a MCCB incomer.
Changing the MCCB to include RCD capability would be one fix. However if you get one of the fancier MCCB you might be able to configure the over-current trip curve to meet 5s for your cable-end Zs of 0.44 ohm (say setting it to trip at 5s for 0.95 * 230 / 0.44 = 496A) so you meet cable disconnection, your "instant trip" is still well beyond any downstream MCB for selectivity, and you are not having to find space for a MCCB add-on module.
I don't know enough about the details of MCCB selection to say for sure, probably
@Julie. or
@davesparks would have a lot more knowledge than me for this aspect.
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Me? Talking nonsense on internet forums seem to be my current status.
At least I keep my clothes on for this forum
Firstly, based on the information, I would assign FI - this could be a very serious issue as I highlight below.
In respect of the mccb settings, that would be a no-go, if you take a measured loop of 0.44ohm, if this is measured cold then we need to correct it for hot running, and then 95% voltage, this would mean the mccb would need to trip in under 5s at circ 688A.
Since a typical mccb has the instantaneous around 10x this would mean a mccb of 68A(~63), or achieving 5s in the time-current curve; typically this would be circ 8x the overload setting, so you would need to set it at around 85A - this would be too low for the circuit I would guess.
The real issue though is why such a high impedance?
I don't know the number of cores, but if it's a 4core 70mm2 cable 40m long, I would guess a r1 of 0.011ohm, and a r2 of 0.048 ohm (The armour should be sufficient if it's 4 or more cores - if it's fewer than 4 core though, it wouldn't), anyway this means the Ze (or Zs at the feeder board) is around 0.4 ohm.
For something feeding 160A circuits this appears very high, and means either there is a bad connection, which could end up being c1; or the incoming fuses wouldn't trip in any sensible time. (C2 on the main protection, and on probably almost all other circuits).
This really needs further investigation, hopefully a loose connection and a cheap fix, but if it is a high Ze then the dno would have to sort it out as their own fuses wouldn't operate in time, only then can you investigate what needs to be done, if anything.