Current:Home > NewsBattery-powered devices are overheating more often on planes and raising alarm -Streamline Finance
Battery-powered devices are overheating more often on planes and raising alarm
View
Date:2025-04-16 18:56:18
Devices powered by lithium-ion batteries are overheating more often during airline flights and passengers often put them in checked bags that go into the cargo hold, where a fire might not be detected as quickly.
Overheating incidents rose 28% from 2019 to 2023, although such events remain relatively rare, UL Standards said in a report released Monday.
E-cigarettes overheated more often than any other device, based on reports from 35 airlines, according to the report.
In 60% of the cases, the overheating — called thermal runaway — happened near the seat of the passenger who brought the device on board.
In July, a smoking laptop in a passenger’s bag led to the evacuation of a plane awaiting takeoff at San Francisco International Airport. Last year, a flight from Dallas to Orlando, Florida, made an emergency landing in Jacksonville, Florida, after a battery caught fire in an overhead bin.
More than one-quarter of passengers surveyed for the study said they put vaping cigarettes and portable chargers in checked bags. That is against federal rules.
The Transportation Security Administration prohibits e-cigarettes and chargers and power banks with lithium-ion batteries in checked bags but allows them in carry-on bags. The rule exists precisely because fires in the cargo hold might be harder to detect and extinguish.
UL Standards, a division of UL Solutions Inc., a safety-science company previously known as Underwriters Laboratories, based its findings on data from 35 passenger and cargo airlines including almost all the leading U.S. carriers.
The Federal Aviation Administration reports 37 thermal-runaway incidents on planes this year, through Aug. 15. There were a 77 reports last year, a 71% increase over 2019, according to the FAA numbers.
Considering that airlines operate about 180,000 U.S. flights each week, incidents in the air are relatively uncommon, and lithium batteries can overheat anywhere.
“We also know that one of these thermal-runaway incidents at 40,000 feet does present unique risks,” said UL’s David Wroth.
Those risks have been known for many years.
After cargo planes carrying loads of lithium-ion batteries crashed in 2010 and 2011, the United Nations’ aviation organization considered restricting such shipments but rejected tougher standards. Opponents, including airlines, argued that the decision on whether to accept battery shipments should be left up to the carriers, and some no longer take bulk battery shipments.
The most common lithium-ion-powered devices on planes are phones, laptops, wireless headphones and tablets. About 35% of reported overheating incidents involved e-cigarettes, and 16% involved power banks.
UL Standards, a division of UL Solutions Inc., a safety-science company previously known as Underwriters Laboratories, based its findings on voluntary reports from 35 passenger and cargo airlines including almost all the leading U.S. carriers.
veryGood! (8792)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Marine accused of flashing a Nazi salute during the Capitol riot gets almost 5 years in prison
- California judge halts hearing in fight between state agricultural giant and farmworkers’ union
- Sonya Massey called police for help. A responding deputy shot her in the face.
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Why Kim Zolciak Is Finally Considering Returning to Real Housewives of Atlanta
- JoJo Siwa Makes Comment About Taylor Swift After Breaking Record for Most Disliked Female Music Video
- 2 senior House Democrats believe Biden could leave 2024 race in days
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- What Usha Vance’s rise to prominence means to other South Asian and Hindu Americans
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- WNBA All-Star Weekend: Schedule, TV, rosters
- CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz Apologizes Amid Massive Tech Outage
- West Virginia governor’s bulldog gets her own bobblehead after GOP convention appearance
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Kim Kardashian, Jennifer Aniston are getting the 'salmon sperm facial.' What is going on?
- Cardi B slams Joe Budden for comments on unreleased album
- Two-time Pro Bowl safety Eddie Jackson agrees to one-year deal with Ravens
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Carol Burnett honors friend Bob Newhart with emotional tribute: 'As kind and nice as he was funny'
Longtime US Rep Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas, who had pancreatic cancer, has died
NASA plans for space station's demise with new SpaceX Deorbit Vehicle
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Sophia Bush Shares How Girlfriend Ashlyn Harris Reacted to Being Asked Out
National Ice Cream Day 2024: Get some cool deals at Dairy Queen, Cold Stone, Jeni's and more
U.S. journalist Evan Gershkovich's trial resumes in Russia on spying charges roundly denounced as sham