KR Exploding batteries spark deadly S Korea factory fire - A massive factory fire that began after several lithium batteries exploded has killed at least 22 people in South Korea.

16 hours ago
By Tessa Wong and Flora Drury, BBC News

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Firefighters took several hours to put out the blaze with dry sand YONHAP/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

A massive factory fire that began after several lithium batteries exploded has killed at least 22 people in South Korea.

The blaze broke out on Monday morning at the Aricell plant in Hwaseong city, about 45km (28 miles) south of the capital Seoul.

Local television footage showed large smoke clouds and small explosions going off as firefighters sought to put out the fire. A part of the roof had collapsed.

South Korea is a leading producer of lithium batteries, which are used in many items from electric vehicles to laptops.

Fire official Kim Jin-young said 18 Chinese, one Laotian and two South Korean workers had been confirmed as among the dead. A final body had yet to be identified, and there are fears at least one more person may be missing.

"Most of the bodies are badly burned so it will take some time to identify each one," Mr Kim said, according to news agency AFP.

A further eight people were injured - two seriously - out of the 100 who had been working when the fire broke out.

The Aricell factory housed an estimated 35,000 battery cells on its second floor, where the batteries were inspected and packaged, with more stored elsewhere.

Mr Kim said the fire began when a series of battery cells exploded, though it remains unclear what triggered the initial explosions.

He explained it was difficult to enter the site initially "due to fears of additional explosions".

It is not yet clear what started the blaze. Lithium batteries are at risk of exploding if they are damaged or overheated.

Whatever the cause, once the fire took hold, it would have spread at speed - giving the workers little time to escape, according to Kim Jae-ho, fire and disaster prevention professor at Daejeon University.

"Battery materials such as nickel are easily flammable," he told Reuters news agency. "So often, there is not enough time to respond, compared to a fire caused by other materials."

As a lithium fire can react intensely with water, firefighters had to use dry sand to extinguish the blaze, which took several hours to get under control.

However, there is still a risk that after the fire is extinguished, it could reignite without warning due to the chemical reaction.

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Fire official Kim Jin-young said 18 Chinese, one Laotian and two South Korean workers had been confirmed as among the dead. A final body had yet to be identified, and there are fears at least one more person may be missing.
Do you think there are South Koreans out there yelling about how the Chinese took their jobs?

Did their ID badges survive, or did they pull out the phrenology to determine who wasn’t Korean?
 
Do you think there are South Koreans out there yelling about how the Chinese took their jobs?
They would probably like it, south koreans are very adverse to work blue collar jobs, they are all into the white collar rat race and trying to circumvent it is seen as something outrageous
 
I'm suddenly reminded of that scene in tremors where earl mentions how working around electricity is the one job he would never take. After seeing so many incidents of these lithium batteries randomly starting fires and causing fatal incidents I think i'll add working anywhere that produces or stores large numbers of those things to that list
 
After seeing so many incidents of these lithium batteries randomly starting fires
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If introducing several lithium ion batteries to every household in the entire country during the past 20 years didn't increase the number of house fires, I think it's safe to say the problem isn't the batteries themselves.
 
Another criminal from the untouchable kingdom did this to their workers. South Korea also has awful track record in chip manufacturing and a lot of the workers end up getting cancer and nervous disorders due to being told the chemicals they work with are not dangerous.
 
It is not yet clear what started the blaze. Lithium batteries are at risk of exploding if they are damaged or overheated
Fun fact, lithium is naturally volitile. Sometimes they just explode. That is a thing. Rare yes. But in a South Korean factory in a humid climate where the AC probably hasn't been upgraded or maintained since the building was built, moisture was probably everywhere, seeped in, and BOOM. Complete speculation, but could have happened.
 
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If introducing several lithium ion batteries to every household in the entire country during the past 20 years didn't increase the number of house fires, I think it's safe to say the problem isn't the batteries themselves.

Lithium batteries are exponentially more likely to heat up and blow up the larger and more numerous they get.

I don't know why. This is why phone batteries are safe, but Teslas are less safe.

Now imagine a huge pile of the stuff.

Edit: After some reading, lithium batteries are suspectible to overheating. The hotter they are, the more heat they make, and if you stack them they can heat each other.

It is a bit like nitroglycerine. The more you pur in one place, the worse it is, as they can very easily set each other off.

So a single phone is fine, but if you stack a hundred of them on top of each other it can get risky. Cars are more likely to combust from damage due to car crashes.

Now if one sets off, the others will too. Don't park close to others....
 
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Yeah, liquid lithium is dangerous shit. Most people don't know this, but a "lithium battery" is actually a fuckton of D-cell sized cells containing liquid lithium that are all daisychained together. (I am referring to regular big time lithium batteries like E-Bike and Tesla Powerwall up to EV batteries, of course.) If one of the cells fails and gets hot, suddenly you have a Lithium Chernobyl on your hands where the cells start exploding one after another, BOOMBOOMBOOMBOOM....

Even worse, liquid lithium is like napalm, you can NOT put that fire out with most fire suppression techniques. The fucker can reignite days or even WEEKS later. A lot of times the fire department is reduced to glaring at the fire like gooneybirds as it goes and goes like the fucking Energizer Bunny.

Li-ion batteries are relatively ok for small time shit like this laptop I'm sperging on or the cell phone charging at the other end of the Permabunker. However, when you try to force them into gigawatt type applications like Hummer EV you wind up sitting on a time bomb that can blow the fuck up at any time.

E-Bikes are worse, especially in the shithole hoods of places like NYC where a good portion of the owners are so retarded that even their home shithole countries kicked them out. "Fuck, where's the charger for my bike? Hey Juan, got any chargers?" Then Juan brings over a bunch of random chargers in a cardboard box from the restaurant. One seems to work, so everybody goes to bed, and wakes up at 2am to a wall of flame.

And that's not even getting into the factories in East Asia where there aren't any safety fallbacks at all and when one of those fucking cells blows among 20 gorillion others that are all made and stored in shithole conditions...
 
Yeah, liquid lithium is dangerous shit. Most people don't know this, but a "lithium battery" is actually a fuckton of D-cell sized cells containing liquid lithium that are all daisychained together. (I am referring to regular big time lithium batteries like E-Bike and Tesla Powerwall up to EV batteries, of course.) If one of the cells fails and gets hot, suddenly you have a Lithium Chernobyl on your hands where the cells start exploding one after another, BOOMBOOMBOOMBOOM....

Even worse, liquid lithium is like napalm, you can NOT put that fire out with most fire suppression techniques. The fucker can reignite days or even WEEKS later. A lot of times the fire department is reduced to glaring at the fire like gooneybirds as it goes and goes like the fucking Energizer Bunny.

Li-ion batteries are relatively ok for small time shit like this laptop I'm sperging on or the cell phone charging at the other end of the Permabunker. However, when you try to force them into gigawatt type applications like Hummer EV you wind up sitting on a time bomb that can blow the fuck up at any time.

E-Bikes are worse, especially in the shithole hoods of places like NYC where a good portion of the owners are so retarded that even their home shithole countries kicked them out. "Fuck, where's the charger for my bike? Hey Juan, got any chargers?" Then Juan brings over a bunch of random chargers in a cardboard box from the restaurant. One seems to work, so everybody goes to bed, and wakes up at 2am to a wall of flame.

And that's not even getting into the factories in East Asia where there aren't any safety fallbacks at all and when one of those fucking cells blows among 20 gorillion others that are all made and stored in shithole conditions...
Lithium battery fires fuel themselves.

All of that energy in the cell gets released
 
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