News

Fast. Fierce. Fatal. campaign highlights dangers of fires from lithium-ion batteries

By on

A campaign to highlight the dangers of fires caused by lithium-ion batteries has launched following an increase in one fire service’s callouts linked to fires caused by charging e-bikes and common devices.


West Midlands Fire Service (WMFS) launched the Fast. Fierce. Fatal campaign after seeing an uptick in fires linked to batteries in devices such as e-bikes, e-scooters, phones, laptops and vapes.

WMFS firefighters responded to 69 incidents involving lithium-ion batteries last year, up from 40 in 2023. These included a young couple who died in a Coventry house fire started by the battery in a bike converted to an e-bike.

There have been such 65 incidents so far this year – and WMFS fears that the Christmas season may bring yet more fires linked to charging lithium-ion batteries, unless more people are aware of their risks.

Poster from West Midlands Fire Service's Fast. Fierce. Fatal campaign

Assistant chief fire officer Steve Ball said: “As Black Friday and Christmas approach, we’re asking people to take extra care when buying gifts – and to make sure devices with lithium-ion batteries are charged safely. The vast majority of us use lithium-ion batteries and devices safely, day in, day out. But the risks grow as we use them more.”

The campaign explains that most rechargeable devices have a lithium-ion battery inside. Although the risk of a good quality battery failing is very low, even a well-maintained battery can fail unexpectedly.

Temperatures inside a lithium-ion battery can reach hundreds of degrees, hotter than a pizza oven, if battery cells overheat – in a phenomenon known as ‘thermal runway’.

Where you keep lithium-ion batteries or devices powered by them, especially when they’re on charge, significantly affects fire risk.

“Keep them away from anything that could catch fire and burn. Somewhere cool and dry is best,” advises the campaign.

“Many people don’t realise they already own and use them daily, and that they could be engaging in dangerous purchase, charging and storage behaviours.” 

Other recent campaigns targeting the issue include Tower Hamlet's 'Dispose Safe' lithium-ion battery campaign and the London Fire Brigade's #ChargeSafe campaign. 

NEWS


Asbestos Sheet Worker Istock Lianem

Experts launch national Asbestos Taskforce to challenge UK’s “manage indefinitely” strategy

By Belinda Liversedge on 28 April 2026

The chair of a new Independent National Asbestos Taskforce has criticised the UK’s strategy around asbestos as ‘dangerously complacent’, saying the time has come for evidence-based removal.



Sitting Workers Istockpeopleimages MED (2)

ILO report: psychosocial risks are now a critical occupational safety challenge

By Belinda Liversedge on 23 April 2026

More than 840,000 people die each year from health conditions linked to psychosocial risks, such as long working hours, job insecurity, and workplace harassment, according to a new global report by the International Labour Organization (ILO).



Istock 1144474127 Credit Gcshutter 500 Min

Three-quarters of Indian companies predict fixed-term employment contracts will rise under new labour laws

By Orchie Bandyopadhyay on 17 April 2026

Nearly 75 per cent of companies expect wider adoption of structured fixed-term employment (FTE) following the implementation of India’s new Labour Codes, suggesting a growing shift towards a more formal and regulated workforce structure, according to a new report.