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On February 5, 2025, a massive fire broke out in a historic train repair hall in Gdańsk, Poland, sending a thick black cloud of smoke over the city. The facility housed 1,500 Mevo city bikes, including 1,300 e-bikes, along with additional spare lithium-ion batteries. As the fire spread, thousands of lithium-ion cells ignited, leading to explosions and intense firefighting challenges. Over 150 firefighters battled the flames, while authorities warned residents to stay indoors due to the toxic smoke.

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45 Comments

  1. Physicist here. Never try to distinguish an electric fire with water! It won't bring it down but instead is dangerous! Firemen should know it but so many times still see them using water.

  2. People need better training about the realistic risks when working with batteries. Be more careful when handling and storing. Develop cheaper and more effective suppression systems that people will actually use. Toxic smoke isn’t good. I bought a gas mask recently.

  3. People need better training about the realistic risks when working with batteries. Be more careful when handling and storing. Develop cheaper and more effective suppression systems that people will actually use. Toxic smoke isn’t good. I bought a gas mask recently.

  4. There is going to be a lot of new cancer patients who lived near that battery storage facility that was sending toxic chemicals into the air. Good luck Poland, you should sue that battery warehouse.

  5. Not that there are any pollution savings with electric garbage 🙄🙄🙄🙄! But how much toxic chemicals have battery fires put into the atmosphere 🤬🤬🤬🤬? I think they are making the world a worse place 🤬🤬🤬🤬!

  6. We can never be ahead of the problem, because the problem has already been introduced on a global scale.
    The problem being that li-ion batteries are inherently unstable and highly dangerous.
    Only way to end the problem is to ban them and come up with something better, or go back to safer and reliable pre-existing technologies.

  7. I remember when people used to pedal bikes and scooters. Never had an issue but sure, people get lazy and want to zip around magically on shotty batteries. The worst my bike has ever done is thrown a chain. Simpler times.

  8. Spraying a scooter with rattle can paint is "refurbishing" it??? Doesn't seem like it was being done in any kind of spray booth either. Sketchy AF.

  9. HOW DO YOU THINK PEOPLE WOULD REACT TO HUGE WARNING LABELS BEING PLACED ALL OVER THIER EBIKES, SCOOTERS, EVS, VACUUM CLEANERS ETC ETC? KINDA LIKE LADDERS AND A PACK OF SMOKES 🚬. CAUTION ⚠️ LION BATTERY'S IN USE, MAY CAUSE??? GO GREEN

  10. What joke. And try and sell people on this will help the environment. You know what would have helped acknowledging greed in the 20s and stopping the gas and oil industry from putting electric car companies out of business. Look it up they did exactly what they did to Trump. Some bs paper wandr filed correctly 10 years prior to gas cars being pushed mainstream. Greed is the reason..

  11. A LOT of these bikes use 'cheaper' internal parts, inc batteries, for a lot of them. Always make sure they are genuine LG or Samsung, as I've used both for a long time and never had a problem with either. 🙂 (Just my opinion, before anyone starts!) 🙄😎🖖

  12. Is it time restrictions on max energy that can be stored on a 'site' be explored? I don't imagine any other fuel being allowed to be stored without limits. For example a petrol station is controlled and may store 45000 litres of petrol. To store the same amount of energy in a not built for purpose building, to me means there is something missing in regulations.

  13. Arm chair critic, but due to the explosive nature of these battery packs, I would think that they should be treated more like an explosive. Concrete walls separating or X number of pallets. Blast walls to direct energy outside the building. Blast doors to isolate other battery storage. Deluge system using water initially, that could switch to use liquid nitrogen if water fails to extinguish the initial fire.

  14. I would never store a cannister of gasoline inside my house or apartment. Large lithium batteries the size of a 1 liter pop bottle are just as dangerous. Store them outside in a shed

  15. Well, the fire in Morris, Illinois was in a building that was supposed to be abandoned, so I think there will always been unscrupulous characters who will ignore whatever regulations are in place.

  16. We need battery holders and chargers to be located outside of buildings in separate lockers. But we also would need a way to have them ping to know they aren't stored inside.

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