Bulk shipments of the batteries are already banned from passenger aircraft, the agency said.
The agency said a United Parcel Service flight that crashed near Dubai last month was carrying large quantities of lithium batteries.
The agency said a United Parcel Service flight that crashed near Dubai last month was carrying large quantities of lithium batteries.
The US airline regulator has warned carriers shipments of lithium batteries may ignite if exposed to high heat in flight, risking a "catastrophic event".
Let's extrapolate this to EVs. An EV with a 400 V drive circuit has anything from 250 to 125 large Li cells (depending on the technology) in a compact unit. Is this tantamount to "Bulk" (ie in "pails")? Possibly more so, remembering Li is a highly reactive alkaline metal in its own right, burning with a dazzling white flame (compounds are spectroscopically crimson-red).
I assume the journalist knows not the difference between heat and temperature (typical!), but what is the high temperature it could be exposed to in flight? I think it can be assumed it would be nowhere near the engines, nor near the nose cone of a supersonic flight. A non-air-conditioned pressurised hold or cargo space would hardly reach 40°C. But an EV car parked in the sun in the Arizona Desert, in a Riyadh street or even in a supermarket car park in this country could easily reach 60°C (this summer, we had 46.2°C shade temperature here, even though it is a small island).
Kaboom??????
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