• Cycle shop fire: ebike batteries blamed

    From Spike@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 13 11:04:04 2024
    London bike shop fire believed to have involved multiple e-bike batteries

    by Rebecca Morley Jul 12 2024

    London bike shop fire believed to have involved multiple e-bike batteries

    West Green Road shop fire.jpg, by London Fire Brigade

    Several people left the building before firefighters arrived and there were
    no reports of any injuries

    A fire at a London cycle repair shop is believed to have been caused by the failure of a lithium battery pack for an e-bike, which then spread to
    involve other e-bike battery packs in the shop, the London Fire Brigade
    (LFB) has said.

    Most of Cycle Stop, situated on West Green Road near South Tottenham, was damaged by the fire on 7 July. Several people left the building before firefighters arrived and there were no reports of injuries.

    A LFB spokesperson said: "Lithium batteries are susceptible to failure and
    can present a serious fire risk if they’re over-charged, short circuited, submerged in water or damaged.

    "Try to ensure they are not getting knocked around while in use or while
    being carried as this can increase the chance of damage to cells."

    The LFB says many of the e-bike and e-scooter fires in London have involved second-hand vehicles, or the bike has been modified using parts bought
    online. “At this time, there is not the same level of regulation of
    products for e-bikes and e-scooters sold via online marketplaces or auction sites when compared to high street shops, so the brigade cannot be
    confident that products meet the correct safety standard,” it added.

    E-bikes and e-scooters have become London’s “fastest growing fire risk”, according to the LFB. There have been reports that some insurers are
    declining cover for e-bike shops due to the perceived fire risk associated, despite bike shops often refusing to work on modified and dangerous
    e-bikes.

    Last year, we reported that some landlords and management companies in New
    York are stopping residents from keeping e-bikes in their apartments, even
    when the batteries meet safety standards. Management company K&R Realty Management reportedly told tenants that e-bike batteries are, “an extreme hazard to the life, health, safety and well-being, body and property of all tenants.”

    A coroner in Bristol recently called for government action to be taken to prevent future deaths related to e-bike fires, saying there appears to be a “lack of understanding” of the potential dangers with lithium-ion batteries used for e-bikes and e-scooters.

    Abdul Oryakhel died after falling from the window of his 16th floor flat in September 2022, when he was trying to escape from a fire caused by the overheating and ignition of a lithium-ion battery pack from an e-bike. His death has been ruled as an accident.

    Scott Peden, whose family died in an e-bike battery fire last year, has
    backed calls for all political parties to commit to bringing in additional safety laws. Charity Electrical Safety First (ESF) has called for the introduction of independent third-party certification for e-bikes,
    e-scooters, and their batteries to reduce the risk of substandard batteries entering people’s homes.

    Gemma Germeney, 31, died at the scene while Lilly Peden, eight, and Oliver Peden, four, were taken to hospital where they sadly later died.

    <https://ebiketips.road.cc/content/news/london-bike-shop-fire-believed-to-have-involved-multiple-e-bike-batteries-5465>



    --
    Spike

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  • From JNugent@21:1/5 to Spike on Sat Jul 13 13:55:24 2024
    On 13/07/2024 12:04 pm, Spike wrote:

    London bike shop fire believed to have involved multiple e-bike batteries

    by Rebecca Morley Jul 12 2024

    London bike shop fire believed to have involved multiple e-bike batteries

    West Green Road shop fire.jpg, by London Fire Brigade

    Several people left the building before firefighters arrived and there were no reports of any injuries

    A fire at a London cycle repair shop is believed to have been caused by the failure of a lithium battery pack for an e-bike, which then spread to
    involve other e-bike battery packs in the shop, the London Fire Brigade
    (LFB) has said.

    Most of Cycle Stop, situated on West Green Road near South Tottenham, was damaged by the fire on 7 July. Several people left the building before firefighters arrived and there were no reports of injuries.

    A chav-bike shop damaged by chav-bikes?

    A LFB spokesperson said: "Lithium batteries are susceptible to failure and can present a serious fire risk if they’re over-charged, short circuited, submerged in water or damaged.

    "Try to ensure they are not getting knocked around while in use or while being carried as this can increase the chance of damage to cells."

    The LFB says many of the e-bike and e-scooter fires in London have involved second-hand vehicles, or the bike has been modified using parts bought online. “At this time, there is not the same level of regulation of products for e-bikes and e-scooters sold via online marketplaces or auction sites when compared to high street shops, so the brigade cannot be
    confident that products meet the correct safety standard,” it added.

    E-bikes and e-scooters have become London’s “fastest growing fire risk”,
    according to the LFB. There have been reports that some insurers are declining cover for e-bike shops due to the perceived fire risk associated, despite bike shops often refusing to work on modified and dangerous
    e-bikes.

    Last year, we reported that some landlords and management companies in New York are stopping residents from keeping e-bikes in their apartments, even when the batteries meet safety standards. Management company K&R Realty Management reportedly told tenants that e-bike batteries are, “an extreme hazard to the life, health, safety and well-being, body and property of all tenants.”

    A coroner in Bristol recently called for government action to be taken to prevent future deaths related to e-bike fires, saying there appears to be a “lack of understanding” of the potential dangers with lithium-ion batteries
    used for e-bikes and e-scooters.

    Abdul Oryakhel died after falling from the window of his 16th floor flat in September 2022, when he was trying to escape from a fire caused by the overheating and ignition of a lithium-ion battery pack from an e-bike. His death has been ruled as an accident.

    Scott Peden, whose family died in an e-bike battery fire last year, has backed calls for all political parties to commit to bringing in additional safety laws. Charity Electrical Safety First (ESF) has called for the introduction of independent third-party certification for e-bikes, e-scooters, and their batteries to reduce the risk of substandard batteries entering people’s homes.

    Chav-bikes never USED to set their owners' dwellings on fire!

    Why not just ban electric chav-bikes? Coupled with automatic
    confiscation if seen in a public place or on a road?

    Something like the same applies to electric cars, the indoor garaging of
    which should be banned, as also garaging within a certain distance (I
    suggest four yards) of any building, other structure or motor vehicle.
    It goes without saying that their carriage on car ferries also needs to
    be prohibited.

    Gemma Germeney, 31, died at the scene while Lilly Peden, eight, and Oliver Peden, four, were taken to hospital where they sadly later died.

    <https://ebiketips.road.cc/content/news/london-bike-shop-fire-believed-to-have-involved-multiple-e-bike-batteries-5465>

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