This is much worse than an e-bike fire.
burnt ion
A fire broke out at a massive lithium-ion battery facility hundreds of miles north of scorched Los Angeles, but it wasn’t the first time problems have occurred at the plant.
As Monterey’s KSBW reports, the Moss Landing plant in Texas, owned by Vistra Energy and billed as the world’s largest lithium-ion storage facility, caught fire earlier this week, leading to fires in and around the plant. Ta. Areas being evacuated.
As anyone who lives in a city with a lot of e-bikes knows, lithium-ion battery fires are notoriously difficult to extinguish. Dense energy storage units that power everything from cell phones to electric cars can catch fire in a phenomenon known as “thermal runaway.” This is a chain reaction where overheating of one battery cell causes other nearby battery cells to overheat. same. As such, fires are essentially self-reigniting, and firefighters often allow these fires to partially self-extinguish, rather than using large amounts of water that cannot be extinguished. I learned that.
Due to the prohibitive amount of water required to extinguish the Moss Landing fire, firefighters initially stepped down from the inferno, but extinguished it before it could reignite in the aftermath of the initial fire. This is a spectacular local disaster and a new symptom. The transition to green energy does not necessarily have to involve major industrial disasters.
where there is smoke
Vistra told KSBW the cause of the fire is not yet known and will not be known until a post-fire investigation can be conducted. However, as local broadcasters pointed out in subsequent reports, the plant has been plagued by breakdowns for years.
Just one year into operation in 2020, local firefighters were called to the facility after a battery overheating incident filled the facility with smoke. Ultimately, Vistra announced in January 2022 that an issue with a liquid cooling hose caused smoke to appear within the facility. Less than a month after that investigation was completed, another meltdown occurred at Moss Landing and firefighters were called out again, KSBW reports.
Although the factory was able to resume operations relatively quickly after these incidents, it is unlikely that Vistra will be able to resume operations soon, given that approximately 75 percent of the facility was destroyed by fire.
Described by local officials as both a “worst-case scenario” and a “wake-up call,” thankfully no one was injured or killed in the Moss Landing plant fire, but the toxic gases emitted by the fire could cause long-term damage. damage has occurred. Flames may be waiting for local residents.
More about the fires: Greedy landlords jack up rents after LA wildfires