The downstream market for electric vehicles will only grow as the first major wave of newly bought EVs starting in 2020 winds its way into the wholesale and used markets.
That means auctions, dealers, reconditioners, vehicle logistics services, and related remarketing businesses will be handling a subset of damaged EVs that bring fire risks. EV fires can burn bright and long, ignite and consume surroundings, and require valiant efforts to extinguish.
The good news lies in the statistics to date: EVs catch fire at a rate of .03% of every 100,000 cars, gasoline vehicles at a rate of 1.53%, and hybrids at 3.47%.
“The government stats show that combustible engines are 100 times more likely to catch fire than an EV,” said John White, director of environmental, health and safety, at Cox Automotive.
White spoke on Sept. 27 at a session, “EV Management: Safety Best Practices for Auctions and Remarketers,” during the annual National Auto Auction Association Convention in Chicago. “Mass hysteria about electric vehicle fires has burst into the media,” he said. “EVs are only a small percentage of fires that occur on the road.”
In one indicator, Manheim reports 43% more EV sales year-over-year at its auctions, which means EVs are more common on the road and hence more fires.
Battery fires caused by damage are referred to as “thermal events,” since the elements can cause a combustible reactive sequence that results in a fire.
“If you puncture a battery cell, you get a short, which generates heat, then causes off gassing, combusts, and leads to arcing,” which spreads the fire beyond the EV, said co-panelist Matt Davis, senior engineering manager of EV battery solutions at Spiers Technology, which is owned by Cox. “If you treat batteries right, you can avoid situations from happening 99% of the time.”
EV fires can burn at 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit. That is double the temperature of volcanic magma and half the temperature of the sun. Once an EV fire occurs, the car cannot be repaired or restored.
“We do not want employees to interact with [damaged] electric vehicles at all,” White said. “They get so hot so quickly and put out a toxic type of vapor with carcinogenic effects on the nervous system.”
Extinguishing an EV fire can take an average of 20,000 gallons of water to control, equal to the volume in a large backyard swimming pool. Despite that dousing, the fire could still reignite and re-energize the heat. Even trained professionals are taught to let EV fires burn if the heat risks are too high.
White and Davis outlined best practices on how auctions and remarketers can look for EV fire warning signs, respond to fires, and deter them: