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Battery Safety Fight: Pilots Take On Big Business After Deadly Crash

JOAN LOWY   10/26/10 06:15 PM ET   AP

Battery Safety Crash

WASHINGTON — Safety advocates have warned for more than a decade that someday an air shipment of lithium batteries like those used in cameras, cell phones and countless other products would catch fire, causing a plane to crash and people to die.

That day may have arrived last month.

A United Parcel Service cargo plane with a fire raging on board, and carrying a large quantity of lithium batteries, crashed near Dubai in the United Arab Emirates on Sept. 3, killing both pilots. The cause of the accident isn't likely to be determined for months, but investigators suspect the batteries were either the source of the fire or contributed to its severity. The Federal Aviation Administration was concerned enough by the accident to warn air carriers about risks posed by lithium battery shipments.

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EDITOR'S NOTE – An occasional look at how behind-the-scenes influence is exercised in Washington.

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The accident has given new urgency to a high-stakes lobbying struggle under way in Washington. Pilot unions and safety advocates are urging the government to treat air shipments of lithium batteries as hazardous materials. But rules proposed by the Obama administration are opposed by many of the nation's top retailers, electronics manufacturers, battery makers and cargo airlines, including UPS.

They say the rules would cost them hundreds of millions of dollars in added packaging, paperwork and training for employees. The rechargeable battery industry alone says the rules would cost more than $1 billion in the first year.

The makers of medical devices say the rules might mean delays in getting equipment to patients, and one electronics lobbyist even portrayed the proposal as a holiday Grinch that could drive up the cost of gift shipments.

"The cost of expedited delivery to stores could become prohibitive and could ruin a lot of Christmases for children," Christopher McLean, executive director of a retailers coalition that includes Amazon.com, Best Buy, Radio Shack, Target and Wal-Mart, told Transportation Department officials at a meeting earlier this year, though that's unlikely this Christmas.

Industry lobbyists say the government already has enough rules to ensure safe battery shipments; they say the problem is that a relative few shippers aren't following current packaging requirements. They recommend stronger enforcement. Indeed, many of the more than 40 documented incidents of lithium battery fires in flight or at airports involved improperly packaged or handled batteries.

George Kerchner, a lobbyist for the rechargeable battery industry, wrote Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood last month asking him not to let the Dubai crash cause regulators to rush put new rules in place.

"We urge that any actions taken by DOT be justified by facts, not speculation or political pressures," Kerchner wrote. "They also should be narrowly drawn to minimize disruption of commerce in a holiday season that will be critical to the nation's economic recovery."

A bill that would prod DOT to move faster on new rules is opposed by industry supporters in Congress.

Pilots and safety advocates say the industry opposition is typical of the hurdles they face when trying to get government regulators to take action to prevent a tragedy even when there is clear evidence of danger.

"All regulation eventually gets written in blood because it takes something catastrophic to get anything done," said Russ Leighton, safety director for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters' airline division. "In this case, only two people died, and it wasn't a huge media story, so we'll probably have to wait till 300 people do die before there's any change."

Safety experts point to the 1996 ValuJet crash in the Florida Everglades that killed all 110 people aboard. The cause of the accident was a fire started by improperly shipped oxygen canisters in the cargo hold. The National Transportation Safety Board said the Federal Aviation Administration shared blame for the accident because the agency failed to implement earlier recommendations that cargo holds on passenger planes be required to have either smoke detectors or fire-suppression systems. The requirements were put in place after the crash.

Lithium batteries are "a big safety concern," said Bob Chipkevich, a former head of NTSB's hazardous materials division. "I don't think we need to wait for a major accident with multiple fatalities to move forward."

Fire broke out four years ago in cargo containing lithium batteries and other goods on a UPS plane. The plane made an emergency landing in Philadelphia and no one was killed. The cause of the fire wasn't determined, but batteries were suspected. Afterward, the NTSB recommended all cargo compartments on cargo-only planes have fire suppression systems. The FAA rejected that recommendation, saying it would be too expensive.

In the recent UPS accident, a fire erupted in the Boeing 747-400's main cargo compartment – the same part of the plane as the passenger compartment on passenger-carrying planes – within a half-hour after takeoff from Dubai. The compartment didn't have a halon gas fire suppression system. The flight's two pilots, racing to return to Dubai, radioed that smoke was so dense in the cockpit they couldn't read their instruments or change radio frequencies.

Unlike other kinds of batteries, some lithium batteries contain metal that will spontaneously ignite if exposed to air. Also, the positive and negative poles in some lithium batteries are close together, leading more easily to short circuiting, which can cause a fire.

Lithium batteries come in two types: lithium metal, which are nonrechargeable and are used in products like watches and cameras, and lithium-ion, which are rechargeable and are used for products like laptop computers, cell phones and power tools. Both can short circuit and ignite if they are improperly packaged, damaged or have manufacturing defects. Batteries contained in devices can also overheat and ignite if the device inadvertently turns on. Overheated lithium batteries can blow the lids off steel shipping containers with enough force to damage a plane. Once a battery catches fire, the heat can set off other batteries.

The halon gas fire suppression systems required in the cargo compartments of passenger planes don't work on fires caused by lithium metal batteries. Shipment of lithium metal batteries is already prohibited on passenger planes, but not cargo planes. There is also concern that if a large quantity of lithium-ion batteries was to ignite, it could overwhelm a halon suppression system. Lithium-ion battery fires can reach 1,100 degrees, close to the melting point of aluminum, a key material in airplane construction. Lithium-metal battery fires are far hotter, capable of reaching 4,000 degrees.

The Air Line Pilots Association has asked LaHood to ban air shipments of all lithium batteries until new rules are implemented.

"It's difficult to know what caused the (Dubai) fire, but it really doesn't matter because we know that a fire did break out on that airplane and the situation quickly became uncontrollable," said Mark Rogers, ALPA's hazardous materials chairman. "We had what was possibly a live demonstration of what can happen if batteries are exposed to fire."

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Online:

Federal Aviation Administration http://www.faa.gov

Department of Transportation http://www.dot.gov

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07:08 AM on 10/30/2010
LifePO lithium cells don't have this problem. And they have quite a few other advantages, too.

Various electric cars will be using LiFePO (lithium iron phosphate) batteries in the near future. Dewalt's most powerful cordless tools have been using LiFePOs from A123 Systems for years.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
02:12 AM on 10/28/2010
what if we install fire suppression systems in the containers the lithium travels in? a halon system in each container and an expanding plastic foam to seal out the oxygen. sounds simple and cheap to me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
09:11 PM on 10/27/2010
Ultraconductors are polymer equivalents of a room temperature superconductor. Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage (SMES) is well understood and operates at cryogenic temperatures. Ultraconductors are polymers, not yet developed as wire, but wire is on the horizon. Energy storage in electron flywheels with no moving parts, at ambient temperatures, will then provide alternatives to chemical batteries for energy storage.

No fire or explosion hazard. See Ultraconductors at www.chavaenergy.com
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
02:13 AM on 10/28/2010
we could also use ambient pulse power devices and not require new batteries. Or super efficent magneticly charge based electrolizers
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
06:38 PM on 10/27/2010
Typical capitalists, always willing and eager to put other people's lives at risk so they can make a few extra bucks. Shame on them. Here's a new rule: if you can't make a profit without endangering the lives of others find a new venture.
07:14 AM on 10/30/2010
Everything is dangerous to some degree. We must constantly reassess and decide what amount of danger is acceptable. New products are coming out constantly -- each requiring a new round of assessments in many areas.

Sometimes small government and deregulated business doesn't serve the public very well. (Still sounds good in a campaign speech though.)
06:01 PM on 10/27/2010
"The FAA rejected that recommendation, saying it would be too expensive."

It's sad when we determine if something should be made safe just due to the expense of implementation.
09:15 AM on 12/16/2010
Yes, and the flip side is "we will tolerate x number of deaths and still deem it acceptable"

How much harm can we get away with is the credo of corporations today.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kris Bui
12:35 PM on 10/27/2010
Sounds like a ship is the way to go.
socialtalker
this micro-bio is a great idea!
12:27 PM on 10/27/2010
here's an idea, how about we STOP OUTSOURCING EVERYTHING and start making the batteries in THIS COUNTRY.this is another outsourcing issue we are yet again getting screwed over folks.
it's insane to be importing something so vital to our daily lives. and while we are at it, lets push for high speed trains that can move 1 ton of freight 500 miles on a single gallon of gas and we can move such cargo around in a safer manner. we have got to start re-building some vital industries in this country and have a far longer vision into the future than these "must have profit by next quarter"-corporations who are slowly impoverishing us and dictating the political process in this country to a complete disaster. if this country refuses to start building the batteries here, there should be a special cargo airline set up with pilots who volunteer for this job and get paid a premium for their risks.
bottom line is this:
the corporations get enough breaks and have no right to endanger the lives of pilots, crew and passengers. lets support the pilots on this issue,
07:22 AM on 10/30/2010
Obama's stimulus helped several American lithium battery producers expand their operations in the country.
11:46 AM on 10/27/2010
Again, its the same as the financial reform bill. We keep asking for lots of regulation that is worthless and no enforcement of existing regulation that would have prevented this tragedy.
07:31 AM on 10/30/2010
New products often require new regulations.
socialtalker
this micro-bio is a great idea!
11:32 AM on 10/30/2010
what existing regulation could have been used?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
RickO
Musician, Atheist
10:45 AM on 10/27/2010
Cloud porn?
09:54 AM on 10/27/2010
these pilots are socialist union thugs! clearly part of the left's war on christmas. what about the children?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PCPrincess
I'm probably gaming.
03:20 PM on 10/27/2010
Hahahaha.. you are clearly drunk or something. Omg.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dahveed1
I have Flying Monkeys...
09:21 AM on 10/27/2010
We want to ban lithium batteries from air shipment, but we're too cheap to put fire suppression systems on airplanes? Perhaps we should do both.

Well I can see the concerns of electronics manufacturers. Nearly every cell phone and laptop today uses this type of battery. Of course, if these batteries are too risky to fly, what makes them safer to ship by boat. Do you want to be on a ship in the middle of the ocean with a fire burning uncontrollably. In fact, I find that any transportation mode on fire isn't a good thing. Perhaps we should consider banning these batteries if we can't manufacture batteries without the flaws that make them start fires.
10:45 AM on 10/27/2010
The difference is that by boat, thew crew have life-boats in which they can abandon ship. Also, fires from these batteries have to be put out with water, which a ship would have an unlimited supply to suppress the fire.
07:38 AM on 10/30/2010
Yikes! Lithium reacts violently with water, creating very flammable hydrogen gas.

Definitely not a fire that can be put out with water.
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RedneckDem
The top 1% stole my made in china bootstraps
09:15 AM on 10/27/2010
So, what they're saying is that the true cost of low prices not only eclipses labor and the environement, it is being surpassed by safety itself. Sad day when they justify this by talking about sad faces on kids over the human toll to get it to them.
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08:46 AM on 10/27/2010
We must pass a law that all electronics lobbyists must travel via cargo airlines.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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okim5150
I only drink to make you more interesting
08:51 AM on 10/27/2010
And the politicians that take their money! Fanned!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jerome Healy
Average Mid-Western Dude
10:52 PM on 10/27/2010
Best idea so far today!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dmann32
08:46 AM on 10/27/2010
And these people are poised to take control of the country by proxy - The GOP!

VOTE!!!!
08:02 AM on 10/27/2010
Quote that I found bothersome; "The cost of expedited delivery to stores could become prohibitive and could ruin a lot of Christmases for children,"

Really? Christmas could be ruined for children due to difficulty with shipping battery operated toys? Wow. Is there a new edition of Tickle Me Elmo coming out that every child must have or else they won't be able to achieve normalcy?

Good grief. Of all the lame excuses to not implement safety policies that have long been lacking, that's about the top.

Walmart ad campaign: "We're ok with killing a few people if it'll make little Johnny smile on Christmas" !?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steven Travis
Really, do you need one?
08:26 AM on 10/27/2010
LOL - that's the same line that had me an a co-worker laughing our a55es off. What a freaking LAME excuse....
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okim5150
I only drink to make you more interesting
08:53 AM on 10/27/2010
As long as it isn't Johnny's dad that gets killed.