Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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Lithium-ion battery-related fires are “becoming an epidemic”, according to Fire and Rescue NSW (FRNSW), after responding to two more blazes in Sydney this morning, 

An e-bike burst into flames in an apartment block in Bankstown in Sydney’s south-west this morning.

A series of apartments on the side of a building.
Fire and Rescue NSW were called to the Bankstown apartment about 6:30am.(ABC News: Helena Burke)

FRNSW were alerted to the explosion this morning at 6:30am, finding an e-bike alight in the living room of an apartment on the third floor.

It is believed the fire occurred after the e-bike’s battery, which was plugged into a generator device, went into thermal runaway. 

Thermal runaway is a process where a lithium-ion cell overheats and gives off toxic gases before exploding.

People line up outside an apartment complex.

About 40 people were evacuated from the 10-storey building in Bankstown.(ABC News: Helena Burke)

“They can just burn quite fiercely. It’s quite a big fuel load. Very, very difficult to put out, which is why we were here so long,” FRNSW station officer Sav Giannakis said this morning on the fire.  

“Even though it’s quite compact, there’s a lot of energy in that battery pack. And when they fail, they fail quite explosively.”

A firefighter standing on a street holds up two fried battery cells up to the camera.

Fire and Rescue NSW station officer Sav Giannakis.(ABC News: Helena Burke)

A number of projectiles from the battery were fired across the apartment as a result of the explosion.

About 40 people were evacuated from the 10-storey building, with one male resident receiving superficial burns on his hand from the fire.

A second lithium-ion battery, believed to be from an e-scooter or e-bike, caught fire in the back of a garbage truck in Silverwater in Sydney’s west this morning.

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