May 2024 Fire Report: Fighting Lithium-ion Battery?? Fires?? on the Frontlines
Ryan Fogelman
FSJA Top Fire Industry Influencers - 2025; Partner @ Fire Rover: Changing The Way The World Fights Its Fires; COfounder/Partner @ COhatch: Strengthening Communities & Improving Lives;
As published on Waste360 , Top Article of The Week!
When you think of lithium-ion battery fires, you might think of data centers and large EV batteries, but the waste and recycling industry has been fighting fires caused by personal electronics and personal storage equipment since 2015.? In this month’s column, I not only highlight the fire data from April but also share some best practices from the National Waste & Recycling Association’s (NWRA) Safety Symposium, as well as my WasteExpo panel experts and my personal experience at Fire Rover.?
April 2024 Fire Data
In the month of April, we experienced 34 fires, 19 of which occurred in waste, paper and plastic operations, eight occurred in scrap operations, five occurred at organics operations, one occurred in an e-scrap operation and one occurred at a rubber recycling facility. Two of these events were confirmed as catastrophic, but that number is highly conservative based on the public reporting without long-term visibility of the actual damage stemming from these incidents. At Fire Rover, we successfully responded to more than 150 fire incidents at our clients’ facilities.?
After a slow start, we are building momentum going into the “summertime spike” we typically experience this time of year. When we look at the first four months of the year, we have incurred 115 fires at our waste and recycling operations. This means we are trending in line with 2021 and 2018. 2021 turned out to be in our favor by the end of the year by just barely edging out 2018, which was the first year the industry was hit by the lithium-ion battery spike. All we can do is keep an eye on the future and hope that this year the summertime spike is more muted.?
However, it is important to remain diligent and know the summertime spike in fires is not caused by just lithium-ion batteries in the waste stream but by the heat, dryness and increases in other fire-causing hazards like fireworks, firework embers, hot loads, hot barbecues, propane tanks, pool chemicals and more.?
Redundancy Is Key?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
In an opportune moment before WasteExpo, I was talking to a couple of the panelists who joined me on the “Dealing with Lithium-ion Battery Fires on the Frontlines” panel. The first panelist was David DeVito from ReSource Waste Services. A veteran of the industry, DeVito has been on the frontlines fighting fires for decades. He also successfully deployed a fully trained fire brigade in response to a massive fire at his 100-acre construction and demolition operation in 2015.?
The second panelist was Bob Shallenberger with Interco, one of the largest battery recyclers in the U.S., who just made an extremely large investment into a 300,000-square-foot processing facility located in the Midwest.?
We met ahead of our Monday afternoon session, with the Vegas Sphere as our backdrop, to briefly discuss fires within the industry. Check out the video below of our discussion.
Here are some key takeaways from our conversation:
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This is why I personally think lithium-ion battery handheld fire extinguishers should not be sold or used. When you can, fight the fire from a distance. Take a look at the below video from NWRA’s 2024 Safety Symposium at WasteExpo where Victor Mancilla, Las Vegas Fire & Rescue’s public education specialist, walks all the participants through fire extinguisher training.
Being properly protected and maintaining a safe distance is a must when fighting any fire event with projectiles and toxic off-gasses emitted from the hazard.
But what’s the big takeaway? You might have guessed it: Redundancy is key!
Fire protection is about layers of protection. If one layer breaks, the next layer is there to catch the fire and so forth. Some folks like to use the analogy of Swiss cheese. If all the holes align, then you can have a major fire event. Each piece of cheese is a layer of protection; for example, a sprinkler system, active monitoring, thermal protection, optical flame detecting, operational best practices, education of the public, the list goes on. The more layers you have in place, the better chance you have at surviving or preventing a potential catastrophic fire in your waste and recycling operation.?
Conclusion
Kudos to the good folks at Informa and NWRA for putting on such an amazing WasteExpo 2024. If you happened to miss the “Dealing with Lithium-ion Battery Fires on the Frontlines” panel where DeVito, Shallenberger and I were joined by Dr. George Thompson from Chemical Compliance Systems, you can watch the full session below.
If you have any questions or insight, please feel free to reach out to any of us. We can help answer any questions you may have and point you in the right direction for effective solutions.?
Ryan Fogelman , is a partner at Fire Rover. He is focused on bringing innovative safety solutions to market, and two of his solutions have won the distinguished Edison Innovation Award for Industrial Safety and Consumer Products. He has been compiling and publishing the “Reported Waste & Recycling Facility Fires In The US/CAN” since February 2016 and the “Waste & Recycling Facility Fires Annual Report.” Fogelman regularly speaks on the topic of the scope of fire problems facing the waste and recycling industries, early detection solutions, proper fire planning and early-stage fire risk mitigation. Additionally, Fogelman is on the National Fire Protection Association’s Technical Committee for Hazard Materials. (Connect with Ryan on LinkedIn at https://www.dhirubhai.net/in/ryanjayfogelman or email at [email protected])
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8 个月*Try EV DOCTOR:* https://youtu.be/xA8c6iadAm8?si=RDDcYYMvyIff0Cy4
RETIRED Principal Process Safety Consultant and DuPont Chemical Engineer.
10 个月Very thankful and proud of your leadership in this very hazardous arena, Ryan. Keep up this value adding effort, George
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