Air-Safety Officials Consider Further Restrictions on
Batteries
Pilots' Union Steps Up Campaign for
Stricter Regulation, Citing Potential Hazard
By
ANDY PASZTOR
International air-safety officials are considering
further restrictions on lithium batteries carried in the bellies of cargo and
passenger airliners, highlighting escalating concerns about potential fire
hazards.
A group of industry and government experts convened by the
aviation arm of the United Nations is slated to take up the topic this week.
Barely four months ago, the same U.N. agency imposed a world-wide ban on bulk
shipments of lithium metal batteries-the most fire-prone type of lithium power
cells-in the cargo holds of passenger jets.
But now the debate appears to
be shifting to controversial proposals, advocated by pilot unions and outside
experts, to possibly extend a version of that prohibition to some or all cargo
aircraft. Expected to be an important issue at the sessions beginning in Cologne
on Tuesday, the heightened discussion comes in the wake of new research by U.S.
regulators emphasizing the risks of transporting all types of lithium
batteries.
Tests by the Federal Aviation Administration revealed that
lithium metal batteries, which aren't rechargeable and power consumer devices
such as cameras and calculators, can erupt in flames much faster than other
versions. In some cases, according to FAA results, lithium metal versions are
more dangerous than previously believed because they can reach temperatures
above 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit and couldn't be extinguished using existing
firefighting chemicals. Lithium ion batteries, meanwhile, were prone to explode,
spewing burning remnants some 150 feet.
One consultant study prepared
years ago for U.S. and Canadian authorities-but disputed to this day by parts of
industry-projected crashes of several big cargo planes by the end of the decade
unless airlines or regulators embraced new safeguards.
It isn't clear
what recommendations will come from the latest deliberations, and a final
decision is months away. So far, much of the focus has been on lithium metal
batteries. But this week's discussion, according to people familiar with the
preparations, also is slated to cover potential limits on the number of
rechargeable, lithium ion batteries carried by a single passenger
aircraft.
Such power cells, ubiquitous inside cellphones, laptops and
other portable digital devices, account for the bulk of the estimated 1.3
billion rechargeable lithium batteries manufactured annually around the
globe.
The discussions involve bulk shipments of batteries, not batteries
carried by individual travelers, although some airlines provide information
warning passengers to take precautions with the batteries they carry.
The
ICAO documents mention placing the "least possible burden" on battery
manufacturers while still providing "the international aviation community with
"an acceptable risk" level. Battery-makers are expected to launch a major effort
to head off any new restrictions that might be imposed by the U.N.'s
International Civil Aviation Organization. They contend that existing packaging
and labeling requirements-combined with ICAO-mandated quality controls at
factories-are adequate to safeguard commercial aviation.
But
increasingly, experts at ICAO, the FAA and pilot unions argue more needs to be
done. In the letter setting up the meeting, Nancy Graham, ICAO's top safety
official, specifically cited "concerns with the risks all lithium batteries
present...on both passenger and cargo aircraft."
"The more testing we do,
the more concerned we are about these dangers," Gus Sarko, manager of the FAA's
fire safety branch, told a conference in Washington last month.
The Air
Line Pilots Association, the largest North American pilot union, is stepping up
its campaign for more-stringent standards and regulations.
ALPA
eventually seeks to outlaw bulk shipments of lithium metal batteries for all
cargo carriers. Meanwhile, the union wants to ensure pilots have detailed
information about the precise location and size of any battery shipments on a
plane, and that cargo crews can get access to certain areas in the event of a
blaze.
No matter what happens this week, many academics and battery
industry officials anticipate tighter restrictions in coming years. "There are a
lot of things that can go wrong in manufacturing and during use" of lithium
batteries, according to Michael Pecht, a battery-reliability expert who teaches
at the University of Maryland. "Events are rare, but they can cause
fires."
"Rules for what you ship and how you ship it are bound to get
tougher," according to Brian Morin, chief operating officer of closely held
Dreamwater International Inc., which makes battery components.
Lithium
batteries are suspected of contributing to two fiery crashes of Boeing 747 cargo
planes in the past four years. Within a few minutes of receiving a fire warning,
pilots of a United Parcel Service Inc. UPS +0.40% jumbo jet couldn't see their
instruments because of smoke and the captain's emergency oxygen system didn't
work properly.
When pilots train for fire emergencies in simulators, they
typically are exposed to relatively small amounts of wispy white smoke. But in
many real fire events, the smoke is much more intense, black and filled with a
combination of sooty particles and toxins, according to David Lawrence, a senior
investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board. It can be "completely
debilitating in the cockpit, and it happens rapidly," Mr. Lawrence said during
the same safety conference in Washington. "You have literally seconds" to don
smoke goggles and an oxygen mask, Mr. Lawrence told pilots in the audience, with
perhaps "only one chance to do it right."
Faced with such potentially
catastrophic scenarios, some airlines are voluntarily acting to reduce risks.
UPS and FedEx Inc. which operate the world's two largest cargo fleets, have
opted to install enhanced fire-suppression equipment. Though the two systems are
different, they both are designed to control flames and temperatures long enough
for pilots to safely land.
Delta Air Lines Inc. on its own, about two
years ago stopped accepting all types of lithium batteries as cargo, according
to a spokesman. In addition, the carrier has taken steps to prevent lithium ion
batteries from ending up in checked luggage, where they can potentially cause a
blaze. If overhead bins get full during aircraft boarding and passengers end up
having to check carry-on bags, gate agents remind travelers to remove spare
lithium batteries.
Over the years, U.S. regulators have mandated improved
fire-resistant cargo liners and insulation for commercial aircraft, along with a
decades-old ban against U.S. passenger planes shipping lithium metal batteries.
Earlier this summer, the Department of Transportation finalized rules
essentially bringing the U.S. in line with ICAO packaging and labeling
requirements.
But with the rechargeable-battery industry, makers of
electronic devices and even trade groups representing retailers are strongly
opposed to further limits on lithium ion shipments, FAA and DOT officials years
ago abandoned plans for tougher overall U.S. regulations. Congress, for its
part, has passed legislation blocking the FAA from revisiting those earlier
proposals, barring conclusive proof that burning lithium batteries directly
caused a major plane crash.
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