South Korea to hold emergency meeting after EV fires raise safety concerns
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SOUTH Korea’s environment ministry said on Thursday (Aug 8) it plans to hold an emergency meeting next week to discuss fires involving electric vehicle (EVs), including a blaze that caused extensive damage, and draw up measures to prevent such incidents.
The ministry said the land and industry ministries will join Monday’s meeting as well as other state bodies, such as the National Fire Agency.
The move comes as analysts warn that authorities and the EV industry need to find ways to allay public worries on safety in a sector already suffering a slowdown in sales.
Yonhap news agency said the government would unveil the new measures early next month.
Separately, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper cited an unnamed transport ministry official as saying South Korea planned to require EV makers to disclose the brand of batteries in cars.
Automakers in South Korea currently need to provide certain information about vehicles, such as fuel efficiency, but only limited details on batteries and do not have to name the manufacturers, the newspaper said.
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The transport ministry declined to give an immediate comment on the report.
Last week, a Mercedes-Benz electric sedan with batteries made by Chinese company Farasis Energy caught fire in the underground garage of an apartment in the South Korean city of Incheon, according to media reports.
The blaze took more than eight hours to extinguish and damaged about 140 cars and 23 people were hospitalised due to smoke inhalation, Yonhap reported.