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Faulty cells likely caused e-scooter fire, probe finds

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Faulty battery cells and modules have been identified as the leading cause of electric scooters catching fire in recent weeks, according to the findings of an initial investigat­ion, two government sources told Reuters.

The probe looked into fire incidents involving three companies, including Ola Electric, which is backed by Japan’s Softbank Group, and was the country’s top-selling e-scooter maker in April. “In Ola’s case, the battery cells were found to be an issue as well as the battery management system,” said one of the sources, who has direct knowledge of the report.

In March, India launched an investigat­ion over safety concerns after a spate of escooter fires, including one where a man and his daughter died when their e-bike “went up in flames”.

India wants e-scooters and e-bikes to make up 80 per cent of total two-wheeler sales by 2030, from about 2 per cent today. But concerns over safety jeopardise consumer confidence and could derail growth of a sector that is key to India’s carbon reduction goals.

“The government has taken samples of cells from the three companies to make further checks,” the person said, adding that the final investigat­ion report is expected in about two weeks.

Ola, which sources its cells from South Korea's LG Energy Solution (LGES), says it is working with the government on the issue and has appointed an external expert agency, in addition to conducting its own probe. “As per the preliminar­y assessment of these experts, there was no fault of the Ola battery management system at all and it was likely an isolated thermal incident,” a company spokespers­on said in a statement.

“The Indian government's report has not yet been released or shared with us. We cannot comment on the report as we have not yet identified the root cause of the Ola scooter incident in March,” LGES in Seoul said in a statement to Reuters.

On April 18, an executive at LGES in India, Prashant Kumar, told Reuters that the company and Ola are “collaborat­ing on an unfortunat­e incident and seeking to understand the root cause.”

In Okinawa’s case there was an issue with the cells and battery modules and for Pureev it was the battery casing, said the first source. Pureev and Okinawa did not respond to an email seeking comment but have previously said they are investigat­ing the fires and have issued a recall of some scooters.

The initial findings of the investigat­ion have prompted the government to consider testing battery cells of escooters before they are allowed to launch, said the second source.

 ?? ?? Safety concerns jeopardise consumer confidence and could derail growth of a sector that is key to India’s carbon reduction goals
Safety concerns jeopardise consumer confidence and could derail growth of a sector that is key to India’s carbon reduction goals

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