http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1421555-chinas-sloppy-battery-industry-threatens-global-gadget-supply-chain/
China’s Sloppy Battery Industry Threatens Global Gadget Supply Chain
By Cindy Drukier, Epoch Times | July 14, 2015

[image]  A technician stands before a battery bank at the State Grid vehicle
battery recharging station in Beijing on May 30, 2012. (Ed
Jones/AFP/GettyImages)

Airlines are increasingly wary of taking fire-prone lithium ion batteries as
cargo

The global supply chain for virtually all battery-powered products is
grappling with a difficult problem: Lithium ion batteries, the kind found in
just about every rechargeable device these days—from laptops, tablets, and
iPhones, to power tools, medical devices, and electric cars—are highly
volatile. If a single battery is damaged it can ignite, heating up a
neighboring battery causing it to catch fire, creating an uncontrollable
chain reaction with catastrophic results.

For obvious reasons, this poses a huge risk especially when shipped by air.
A pilot with a fire in the cargo hold has few options. And the worst has
already happened. There have been more than 80 incidents, mostly since 2004,
including fatalities, on commercial flights, cargo flights, and in airmail
deliveries.

Lithium metal batteries (single-charge batteries found in items like watches
and toys) are already banned as cargo on passenger planes, and a growing
list of airlines have also banned shipments of lithium ion batteries on
commercial flights, including Delta, United, Qantas, Air France, Virgin
Australia, Cathay Pacific, and Philippine Airlines. All-cargo airline
Cargolux also bans them.

"If shipments are suspended or banned outright for air transportation, it
would be a logistical disaster."

Even a single bad battery can start a fire. In December 2010 a fire broke
out on an Air France flight after a passenger’s cellphone fell into the
seat. When the chair moved, it crushed the battery and caused a fire.

More bans will come if something doesn’t change. 

Pilots, airlines, and airplane manufacturers have already stated they would
rather see lithium ion battery shipments suspended until there’s a safer way
to deal with them. They say today’s aircraft aren’t equipped to deal with
the threat. 

[image
http://img.theepochtimes.com/n3/eet-content/uploads/2015/07/14/AP_873824221527-lithium-ion-674x379.jpg
FILE - This file frame grab from video, provided by the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) shows a test at the FAAs technical center in Atlantic
City, N.J. International aviation officials are trying to quickly come up
with safer packaging for air cargo shipments of lithium-ion batteries, after
U.S. testing confirmed that aircraft fire suppression systems can't prevent
overheated batteries from causing a powerful explosion. Officials familiar
with discussions this week at a meeting in Montreal of the International
Civil Aviation Organization's committee on hazardous cargo said the group's
members heard a detailed presentation by aircraft manufacturers and pilot
unions on the potential for the batteries to cause an explosion and fire
capable of destroying a plane. (FAA, via, File)
]

In a joint submission to International Civil Aviation Organization [
http://www.icao.int/safety/DangerousGoods/DGPWG15/DGPWG.15.WP.004.5.en.pdf
] (ICAO) of the U.N. in April, the association that represents all the major
plane manufacturers such as Boeing, Airbus, and Bombardier (the ICCAIA); and
the International Federation of Airline Pilots Association, said that
carrying lithium ion batteries as cargo currently poses “an unacceptable
risk to the air transport industry.”

The submission explains today’s planes can’t handle the particularly high
temperatures of lithium fires and the speed with which the fires can spread,
and standard halon fire suppressants are not effective enough against these
fires.

At the April meeting, the ICAO decided to convene a special task force to
address the issue of whether lithium ion shipments can be made safe enough
for air transportation, particularly on passenger planes. The task force is
expected to present its recommendations in October. 

If shipments are suspended or banned outright, it would be a logistical
disaster not just for companies that make and sell batteries, but for any
firm that deals in products that use lithium batteries.

China’s ‘Willful Noncompliance’
From the battery industry’s perspective, they’re between a rock and hard
place. No matter how robust the regulations get—and they certainly favor
strict safety rules—the real issue isn’t the rules, but compliance.

Rules around how to package and ship lithium ion batteries have already
become much more strict. New U.S. regulations went into effect last
February, and an even stricter international regime will apply as of January
2017. Regulations affect documentation, packaging, and labeling, to the
extent that even a single package of two AA batteries has to be labeled as
hazardous goods.

But when it comes to compliance, the consistent bad apple that threatens to
spoil the bunch is China—the world’s largest producer of lithium batteries.

Bob Richards, vice president of regulatory affairs at Labelmaster, which
specializes in helping companies be compliant for dangerous goods shipping,
said 95 percent of safety incidents involving lithium batteries were because
of noncompliant shipments.

The danger is when lithium batteries short-circuit—which can happen if
they’re poorly made or damaged—and they release highly volatile gases.

"We have a problem in one part of the world and now we can’t even move
batteries around the United States."
— Bob Richards, vice president, Labelmaster

“There are numerous Chinese manufacturers that will ship you lithium
batteries at a really low cost. A number of these companies fail to properly
test, package, or manufacture the batteries according to current
regulations,” said Richards.

“It’s frustrating that the regulators are not focusing on the real problem,
those who are cheating,” said Richards who himself was a regulator. From
2006 to 2010 as deputy associate administrator he ran the day-to-day
operations of the Hazardous Materials Transportation Safety Program under
the Department of Transportation (DOT).

The result of there being cheaters, is that airlines have become reluctant
to accept lithium battery shipments at all, which is wreaking havoc on
supply chains for American companies that follow the rules, said Richards.

“We have a problem in one part of the world and now we can’t even move
batteries around the United States,” he said.

"Disappointingly, we are seeing some willful noncompliance in the area of
lithium batteries—particularly here in China."
— Tony Tyler, director general, IATA

The airlines recognize this problem too. During a visit to Beijing in April,
the director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA),
Tony Tyler, chastised China on this point:

“Disappointingly, we are seeing some willful noncompliance in the area of
lithium batteries—particularly here in China. For example, there is a
supplier on Alibaba claiming they will relabel 300 Watt hour batteries as
100 Watt hour, and even ship them via the standard postal service,” said
Tyler.

There have been numerous other examples too, including an undeclared battery
shipment from Hong Kong aboard a UPS Boeing 747 that crashed near Dubai in
2010 after a severe inflight fire, killing the crew.

Holding China Accountable
Dealing with China’s noncompliance is a source of enormous frustration for
the battery industry and shippers.

“How do we prevent companies that do not follow the rules and ship their
noncompliant batteries in plain brown boxes aboard aircraft from doing so
and hold them accountable?” asked Richards adding, “The airlines can’t
reject them if they don’t know what is in the box.”

For Richards, the safety problem can never be fully resolved unless China is
held accountable.

In the United States, the DOT inspects battery suppliers and manufacturers.
Packages that violate the rules are rejected and violators can be fined. The
U.S. Postal Service asserts similar authority over mail shipments.

Richards said the Chinese regulators he’s spoken with claim they don’t have
jurisdiction over manufacturers and shippers.

Moreover, the logistics on the Chinese side are especially complicated.

Most of the batteries manufactured in China will depart for overseas via
Hong Kong, but that comes after a string of complex logistics, which can
include a ground transporter, freight forwarder, an export agent in Hong
Kong, plus package handling and consolidators in the mix too.

"From a logistics standpoint and an enforcement standpoint it is a complex
situation."
— George Kerchner, executive director, Rechargeable Battery Association,
PRBA

“From a logistics standpoint and an enforcement standpoint it is a complex
situation,” said George Kerchner, executive director of the Rechargeable
Battery Association, PRBA.

At the same time, Kerchner said, “It would be inaccurate to say they have no
control over it.”

“We have our members who are shipping out of Hong Kong on a daily basis who
are in complete compliance,” he said.

Richards wants the United States and international regulators to pressure
China to police its own industry, but he has yet to see any traction on this
idea.

“I’ve talked to pretty high-ranking officials about this, and they’re like,
‘There’s nothing we can do about it.'”

He thinks more pressure can be applied, for example in the form of criminal
charges.

“If you have lithium batteries put in a brown box, and it catches fire and
kills a cargo pilot, shouldn’t that be homicide? Shouldn’t they be put in
jail?” said Richards.

James Woodrow, head of IATA’s Cargo Committee and chief of Cathay Pacific
Cargo, said the same in a speech at the World Cargo Symposium in Shanghai in
April: “Flagrant abuses of dangerous goods shipping regulations, which place
aircraft safety at risk, must be criminalized, as are other actions, which
place aircraft safety at risk.”

PRBA, is also trying to apply pressure on this issue. It submitted a letter
to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in August urging the
U.N. agency to take action.

“(C)ompliance and enforcement has been particularly problematic for products
originating in the People’s Republic of China and shipped from Hong Kong,”
reads the letter.

The letter states noncompliant shipments are “extremely troubling” to PRBA
members, yet there’s little they can do about transgressors.

“ICAO, however, is in a position to act,” the letter states. It concludes by
warning that without enforcement, the danger posed by lithium ion batteries
will remain.

“(W)ithout an aggressive enforcement effort, the chance of an incident
greatly increases. This is an unacceptable situation—and one that can be
avoided.”
[© theepochtimes.com]
...
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1305335-airlines-grapple-with-explosive-risk-of-lithium-ion-batteries/
Fire-Prone Lithium-Ion Batteries a Big Problem for Airlines




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