Ottawa

E-bike, scooter fires in Ottawa prompt warnings about safety

An e-scooter fire in Ottawa on New Year's Day has officials urging people to ensure any products with lithium-ion batteries meet Canadian electrical standards and are properly maintained.

3 fires in Ottawa related to e-bikes, scooters batteries in 3 months

An 'orange red hot blaze': These two e-scooters caught fire on New Year's Day

2 years ago
Duration 1:16
Gerry Gill, division chief of safety for Ottawa Fire Services said, as e-scooters grow in popularity, it's likely that guidelines and bylaws will soon come into force designed to prevent fires like the one at a complex on Cathcart Street New Year's Day.

An e-scooter fire in Ottawa has officials urging people to ensure any products with lithium-ion batteries meet Canadian electrical standards and are properly maintained.

Firefighters were called to a Cathcart Street row home complex in Lowertown around 9 a.m. New Year's Day after two larger scooters were engulfed in flames while under a carport.

"I didn't know what exactly was burning," said Jason Leduc, a neighbour who tried to douse the blaze with a fire extinguisher and a hose while his partner called 911.

"It was reaching to the ceiling and it was, I mean, a super hot fire," he said. "It was just an orange red hot blaze."

A woman and man stand in front of burned e-bikes and a pile of house insulation.
Anna Cheung and Leduc smelled smoke and then saw the fire in their neighbour's carport. Leduc tried to put it out with a fire extinguisher, but the blaze was already too strong. (Kimberley Molina/CBC)

Thermal runaway

The cause of Sunday's fire, and whether it began with the e-scooters or if they were simply a casualty, is still being investigated.

Yet, as micromobility products — anything from e-bikes and e-scooters to hoverboards and e-unicycles — increase in popularity, there's been an increase locally in fires related to their lithium-ion batteries, with three such fires in Ottawa in the past three months.

A neighbour took this video of a fire that destroyed two e-scooters

2 years ago
Duration 0:20
Jason Leduc said he tried to douse the flames with a fire extinguisher before firefighters arrived at the Cathcart Street row home complex.

"The scooters are everywhere," said Gerry Gill, division chief of safety for Ottawa Fire Services.  "People are using them for transport on city streets. They're using them for delivery. Some people are making a living with them."

They're often charged indoors, Gill said, which can increase the danger of "thermal runaway" — a chemical chain reaction that occurs when battery casings become damaged, lose their insulation and lead to short-circuits.

What comes next, Gill said, can occur just as quickly as throwing a cigarette into a wastepaper basket.

"The fire will spread faster than you can walk out of the room," he said.

Warning signs include bubbling, popping or hissing sounds, followed by a white vapour cloud coming from the battery and a sickly sweet smell.

It's not just the fire that can be deadly: hydrogen from batteries can mix with other chemicals to create hydrofluoric acid, said Gill, which is highly corrosive and can destroy tissue and bone. 

Man stands beside electric bike in a shop
William Leishman, owner of Scooteretti, an e-bike retailer in the ByWard Market, says there are concerns when a product doesn't meet the electrical safety standards set out by the Underwriters Laboratories of Canada. (Kimberley Molina/CBC)

The commission sent a letter to 2,000 manufacturers in mid-December outlining safety concerns with products that don't meet health and safety standards. 

Between Jan. 1 and Nov. 28 of last year, there were at least 208 fires or or incidents where micromobility products overheated, its letter said. Nineteen people died, including a nine-year-old boy in New York, and at least 22 people were injured.

"There's no forced standard as of right now," said William Leishmen, who sells e-bikes at his ByWard Market shop Scooteretti. He said he's not surprised fires are on the rise.

Not just used in e-scooters

Lithium-ion batteries are found in many other products, including cell phones, laptops and electric toothbrushes. The New York City Fire Department said in an email to CBC it had investigated 320 fires resulting in 10 deaths and hundreds of injuries from products using the batteries during the same 2022 time span.

Gill said the best way to ensure a product remains safe is to follow the manufacturer's specifications, get it regularly inspected, not use an aftermarket charging cord and ensure the battery is kept at room temperature and receives decent air circulation.

Most of all, people should not make any modifications themselves without visiting a reputable repair person.

"As a consumer, what's really, really important is do your homework," he said. 

"If it looks like a great deal or you're dealing with a small company and the price looks attractive, if they don't have any certifications, by all means please avoid those products. You're doing yourself and your family a favour.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kimberley Molina is a reporter with a focus on health-related stories for CBC Ottawa. She can be reached at kimberley.molina@cbc.ca.