McGoldrick was encountering fires like this an increasing number of typically. The earlier yr, he says, a number of rowhouses have been badly burned after overcharged lithium-ion batteries in racing drones ignited inside. In one other close by incident, previous lithium-ion biomedical units at a scrapyard bought soaked in a rainstorm and combusted.
The Tesla fireplace felt like a breaking level. “We have been like, ‘Okay, that is simply too many incidents in a brief period of time,’” McGoldrick remembers. He went in quest of somebody who may assist his firm get higher at responding to fires in lithium-ion batteries. He discovered Patrick Durham.
Durham is the proprietor of (and mustache behind) StacheD Coaching, considered one of a rising variety of personal corporations serving to first responders learn to cope with lithium-ion battery security, together with electric-vehicle fires.
Though there isn’t stable information on the frequency of EV battery fires, it’s no secret to EV makers that these fires are occurring. But the producers supply no standardized steps on how one can combat them or keep away from them within the first place, leaving first responders scrambling to go looking via every automotive’s emergency response information—one thing that’s laborious to do once you’re standing in entrance of an immolating car.
On this void, Durham presents a wealth of assets to first responders, from easy-to-follow video tutorials to hours-long in-person workshops. In 2024 alone, Durham says he educated roughly 2,000 first responders across the nation. As extra folks purchase EVs, partially to assist deal with local weather change, the necessity for this coaching has solely grown; in lower than two years, Durham’s YouTube channel has attracted nearly 30,000 subscribers. (The US doesn’t at the moment acquire information on the frequency or causes of EV fires, however this yr the US Hearth Administration and the Hearth Security Analysis Institute are rolling out a brand new information assortment system for fireplace departments.)
A circumspect man with a shaved head, brown eyes, and a thick horseshoe mustache framing his mouth, Durham beforehand labored as a mechanical engineer creating battery packing containers for EVs. He’s additionally a volunteer firefighter, and in 2020 he provided his first coaching on fires in lithium-ion batteries to his native division. From there, his fame unfold by phrase of mouth. In the present day, StacheD Coaching is Durham’s full-time work. He’s additionally the captain of his native volunteer fireplace division in Troy, Michigan.
As extra EVs hit the street, what worries Durham most isn’t simply the rising probability of battery fires—it’s their depth. “The severity of the fireplace is important in comparison with a daily car fireplace,” he says.
“The standard automotive fires that you just and I grew up with—nearly all of these at all times begin within the engine compartment,” says Jim Stevenson, a fireplace chief from rural Michigan who has taken Durham’s coaching. “So we mainly get there, we pop the automotive hood, after which we put out the fireplace from there, and if it will get into the internal compartment of the automotive? Not a giant deal. You spray it down with the hose, and it’s out very quickly.” With EV fires, Stevenson says, “it’s only a utterly completely different monster.”