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8 automakers improve EV fire guidance

EV fires

Eight automakers have improved their emergency response guides for EVs and incorporated vehicle-specific details on extinguishing lithium ion battery fires following a recommendation last year by a federal safety agency.

The National Transportation Safety Board on Wednesday said Honda, Hyundai, Mitsubishi, Porsche, Volkswagen and Volvo — along with electric commercial vehicle maker Proterra and electric bus maker Van Hool — have completed the actions asked for in the recommendation issued in January 2021 to 22 vehicle manufacturers.

The agency asked those manufacturers to model their emergency response guides on international safety standards and to include vehicle-specific information on extinguishing electric vehicle battery fires as well as mitigating thermal runaway and the risk of battery reignition.

Twelve automakers, including Ford, General Motors, Tesla and Toyota, are making progress on the recommendation, the agency said. Two others — Nova Bus Corp. and Karma Automotive — have not yet responded to the agency’s voluntary request.

The agency called on the companies for action after a 2020 NTSB safety report found inadequacies in the guidance they provide to emergency personnel responding to EV battery fires.

“First responders deserve to have the information they need to stay safe when providing post-crash care — and that includes knowing how to suppress a high-voltage lithium ion battery fire,” NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said in a statement. “Our recommendation is a simple but powerful action that can save the lives of first responders and crash victims alike.”

— Audrey LaForest

What you need to know

World events are fanning new interest in hydrogen: Whether hydrogen can fill a more prominent role in reducing emissions remains a key question as government and industry leaders across the globe seek to combat climate change.

Panasonic plans massive North America EV battery buildup: Japanese electronics and battery giant Panasonic wants to at least triple battery production capacity in North America through 2029 to supply new customers.

Volvo will partner with Epic Games for advanced EV technologies: Volvo hopes the partnership will improve driver-assistance and visualization technologies to provide “richer layers of information” to the driver without the “additional distraction or stress” that come with repeated notifications from the vehicle.

Kristin Dziczek

Roundup

Geely launches first 9 low-orbit satellites intended to support autonomous vehicles.

Stellantis secures lithium supply from California for EV batteries.

Lithium iron phosphate batteries offer cheaper alternative, albeit with less range.

Chevrolet slashes Bolt prices by $6,000 for 2023 as GM prepares to roll out electric crossovers using Ultium batteries.

Ford will invest $3.7 billion across three states in latest EV push.

Brain food

BloombergNEF’s annual transportation outlook shows that relying on markets or personal vehicles alone will leave the climate in a precarious position, writes Protocol Climate.

Last mile

In West Virginia, legislation related to electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicles and promoted by Hyundai’s air mobility arm, Supernal, may create more problems than it solves, according to The Air Current.