Aviation Panel Urges Tougher Packaging Standards for Lithium
Battery Shipments
An international group of industry and government experts has decided to
begin developing tougher packaging standards for shipments of lithium batteries
as cargo on commercial aircraft, according to people familiar with the
details.
Hammered out during a week-long meeting by an advisory group of experts to
the International Civil Aviation Organization, an arm of the United Nations, the
move is an important but gradual step in the agency's effort to reduce fire
hazards posed by cargo shipments of various types of lithium batteries on
jetliners world-wide.
The agreement on the need for more-robust packaging, these people said,
indicates a consensus among battery makers, national regulators and airlines
that further changes are essential to alleviate current risks from airline
shipments of many hundreds of millions of lithium power cells
annually.
The advisory panel, according to these people, didn't endorse banning or
suspending certain battery shipments until revamped packaging standards are in
place.
Announcements are expected in the next few days, according to people close
to the matter.
Safety experts and members of the advisory panel months ago advocated
more-robust packaging for lithium batteries, including installing fire-retardant
gels between batteries and reducing the maximum charge of bulk shipments of
batteries placed on aircraft.
Drafting new packaging standards is likely to take months, and it is likely
to take many more months for ICAO's policy makers to review and approve any
binding changes. Still, this week's decision is the latest sign that momentum is
accelerating for tighter rules affecting both air freighters and the cargo holds
of passenger jets.
Lithium batteries, packed tightly together, can overheat or catch fire if
they are damaged or experience short circuits. They have been implicated in
intense, quickly spreading fires that brought down two jumbo freighters-and
ravaged another big cargo jet on the ground-during the past nine
years.
Before this week's deliberations, plane makers joined pilot union leaders
in arguing that existing jetliners weren't designed or built to withstand the
high temperatures or explosive gases that also can result from fires involving
lithium-ion power cells.
In recent months, some large international airlines have voluntarily
restricted or completely stopped accepting bulk shipment of rechargeable lithium
ion batteries, used to power laptops, mobile phones and myriad other consumer
electronic devices. New packaging restrictions could end up imposing procedural
changes and higher costs on a fast-growing global battery industry that churns
out billions of cells annually and generates an estimated $12 billion in revenue
from rechargeable batteries alone.
Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd., a major transporter of lithium batteries
coming from Chinese factories, last month decided to stop lithium battery
shipments on all of its planes.
Europe's largest freight-only carrier, Cargolux Airlines International SA,
said on Tuesday it would temporarily stop carrying some lithium batteries on its
cargo jets amid a global review of such shipments.
The suspension of such shipments is slated to begin Friday. The ban on bulk
shipments expands the type of lithium batteries Cargolux won't carry, though it
doesn't cover some power cells packed with or used in equipment, the carrier
said.
"There's a long road ahead and a lot variables at play" before final
standards can be put in place, according to Mark Rogers, who has been heading up
efforts by international pilot unions to crack down on battery shipments. But he
said the ICAO panel's decision was a major move to reduce in-flight
hazards.
Tim Canoll, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, North America's
largest pilot union, said he was encouraged by ICAO's action because "packaging
is an important piece in a multilayered approach."
"We look forward to participating in the work as ALPA pursues the goal of
maintaining the safest possible air transportation system," Mr. Canoll added in
the news release.
The panel, composed of more than two dozen experts, didn't agree on
specific fire-retardant technology or packaging details. Instead, a working
group is supposed to come up with proposed standards by the fall covering
transportation of both rechargeable lithium ion batteries and lithium metal
versions that carry a one-time charge.
In moving to authorize work on new safeguards, the panel set the safety bar
fairly high by agreeing that any revised packaging must be fire-retardant enough
to prevent the spread of flames or explosive gases to nearby packages or
throughout cargo holds. Depending on how such "performance-based" standards are
drafted, some experts have predicted that certain high-volume shippers may opt
to halt airborne shipments altogether owing to cost considerations.
Besides gels, engineers and industry experts also have been working on
filler materials intended to be placed inside packages that fuse together to
prevent the spread of fires; the industry also has developed fire-resistant
covers for cargo containers and various fire-suppression systems designed to
keep flames or hot gases from spreading outside those containers.
Mr. Rogers, who has advocated more-aggressive steps including outlawing
certain lithium battery shipments from all commercial aircraft, said the
anticipated standard will clarify "how we can ship (such) explosives on
commercial aircraft" while guaranteeing that fires can't spread outside
individual packages.
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