Lithium-ion batteries a growing fire hazard in NYC garbage trucks, DSNY says

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Fires inside New York City garbage trucks caused by lithium-ion batteries are rising at an alarming rate, prompting sanitation officials to issue repeated public warnings against tossing the devices in household trash.

Sanitation department spokesperson Joshua Goodman said 18 fires on city collection trucks over the last year were โ€œlikely relatedโ€ to the batteries โ€” a threefold increase from the year before.

The batteries are supposed to be disposed alongside other hazardous materials, and city officials urge New Yorkers to get rid of them at disposal sites or at sanitation outreach events.

While no injuries have been reported from the truck fires, city officials say they are concerned about the dangers to sanitation employees as these batteries proliferate in the small electronic devices and e-bikes that are widely used by the cityโ€™s food delivery workers.

โ€œThis is certainly a growing challenge that we as an industry are facing,โ€ said Gregory Anderson, the sanitation department’s deputy commissioner for policy and strategic initiatives, during an April 19 City Council hearing.

On April 15 in the Bronx, FDNY units responded to a fire that had erupted inside a sanitation truck near Grand Avenue and North Street in University Heights.

The Norwood News reported that witnesses saw the flames and alerted the truck crew, who had to dump the burning garbage onto the street in a video provided by a resident. An FDNY spokesperson said an unspecified lithium-ion battery was recovered from the garbage and handled by a hazmat team.

โ€œIt is against the law to dispose of lithium-ion batteries in your trash or regular recycling, and these fires are clear evidence that doing so endangers the lives of our sanitation workers,โ€ Goodman said.

An FDNY spokesperson said the department doesnโ€™t track data on the number of lithium-ion battery fires that break out in city-owned vehicles.

But the devices are a growing cause for concern. A fire sparked by an e-bike battery in…

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