When an EV fire begins in a downtown parking garage and burns up the other cars and injures people in the office building over it, it will be something to behold.
Wait - it has already happened
Mercedes-Benz EV Explodes In Parking Garage Sending 23 To HospitalA Mercedes-Benz EQE that was parked in a parking garage in Incheon, South Korea burst into flames recently with no apparent cause. The vehicle was not charging at the time that it caught fire. The resulting blaze forced an evacuation of the building and sent over 20 people to the hospital due to smoke inhalation.
The fire was caught in its early stages on a CCTV camera inside the garage. It initially looked like white smoke creeping from under the car and gradually flowing around the other vehicles parked on either side of the EQE. The trickle of smoke quickly grew to engulf the vehicle before the explosion. According to Inside EVs, the fire damaged a total of 140 cars in the garage with at least 70 suffering significant damage from the incident.
Electric Vehicle Fires Are A Challenge To Extinguish
Vehicle fires can happen in any vehicle, but when that vehicle is electric, whether a Mercedes or a Tesla Model S, putting it out can be tricky. They burn much hotter than gas vehicles, reaching temperatures of up to 5,000° F compared to 1,500°F for a gas vehicle fire, which makes it hard for firefighters to get close. These fires also take much more water to put out, increasing the amount of time that they burn and the potential for damage to surrounding objects.
n this case, the fire was so strong that it impacted the electric grid of both the apartment building where it was located and the entire apartment complex. A total of 103 people were initially evacuated from the building and the fire is now out. There were nearly 500 households without power or water five days after the fire was extinguished.
https://youtu.be/U15rbNDnWr8https://carbuzz.com/mercedes-benz-ev-explodes-23-sent-to-hospital/This prompted a new regulation banning EVs in garages.