Rising number of lithium battery incidents on airplanes worry pilots, flight attendants – VisionSafe

Rising number of lithium battery incidents on airplanes worry pilots, flight attendants

Source: Stephen Stock, Amy Corral, Jose Sanchez, Dilcia Mercedes | cbsnews.com

Saindy Pyles thought she was going to die with her baby son, Liam, clutched to her chest as she flew home to Wichita from Miami after photographing a wedding.

Midway through the flight Pyles said smoke filled the cabin after she saw sparks and fire burst from a bag in the seat directly behind her.

“Honestly, I thought we were going to die,” she said. “I looked and all I saw was flashes, just like flashes. I’m like, ‘Oh my God, like, what is that?’ And [the owner of the bag] is like, ‘I don’t know. I don’t know.'”

“Then I took my baby and I ran to the first class. I don’t know how I got there. I think I hurt my arm.”

Quick action by the flight crew contained the smoky flashing lithium battery, which had begun smoldering in a carry-on bag right behind the seats where Pyles, her son and mother-in-law had been sitting. Airport fire trucks met the plane on the runway and everyone evacuated safely. However, it’s an experience Pyles said she’ll never forget, one she shared on social media to make others aware.

A CBS News Investigation has discovered similar incidents have been happening much more frequently in the skies over the United States. The FAA verifies the number of lithium-Ion battery fires jumped more 42% in the last five years.

A CBS News analysis of the FAA’s data found that since 2021 there’s been at least one lithium battery incident on a passenger plane somewhere in the US, on average, once every week.

To see just how dangerous a lithium-ion battery can be, CBS News went behind the scenes at the lab operated by the University of Texas Fire Research Group (UTFRG) in Austin.

For eight years, engineering professor and UTFRG director “Deke” Ezekoye and his team have been testing everyday devices like cellphones, laptop computers, hoverboards and power tools that run on lithium-ion batteries. They do this to study how these batteries in all their different forms interact, overheat, catch on fire and explode.

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