Scotty, In the US (and presumably elsewhere with US types of influences), utility generation has been high resistance grounded as you are familiar with and the generator connected to unit transformer so that there is no need for the generator to feed ground faults - trip on any fault. In industrial systems, on the other hand, the generator is often directly connected to the system without benefit of a unit transformer. To facilitate clearing of downstream ground faults, the generators are low resistance grounded, to supply the 200A to 400A mentioned so that detectable ground fault current flows. All is fine and good as long as there are no faults in the generator. As a large cohort of industrial generators installed in the 40's, 50's, and 60's started to age and develop internal faults, the insurance carriers saw that they were having to pay out much larger claims than expected. Testing and studies determined that most of the generator damage was occurring after the generator breaker tripped. As a means of limiting this damage, but still allowing the generator to furnish ground fault current to faults elsewhere on the system, the hybrid grounding system was developed. A low resistance grounding system is installed in parallel with a high resistance grounding system with a high speed switch on the low resistance side. On faults in the generator zone, the switch opens and the generator becomes high resistance grounded.