GM offers loaners to Chevy Volt owners worried about battery fire risk

Federal regulators are investigating battery fires in the Chevy Volt / GM
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened a formal safety investigation into fire dangers of the Volt. This move came after the agency replicated an incident from last May in which a Volt battery caught fire three weeks after going through a safety crash test. In three tests last week, technicians damaged the Volt batteries in a similar way; one battery caught fire, and two showed signs of overheating.
NHTSA said it had no reports of fires from real-world crashes. And the agency said in a statement: "NHTSA continues to believe that electric vehicles have incredible potential to save consumers money at the pump, help protect the environment, create jobs and strengthen national security by reducing our dependence on foreign oil."
These cars keep their value for the long haul
Crash test: Hybrids safer than other cars
Ford aims to fix troubled MyFord Touch system
General Motors said in a statement it was working with NHTSA on additional testing and also was monitoring all the Volts on the road. With its OnStar emergency communications system, the company said it "knows in real time about any crash significant enough to potentially compromise battery integrity."
Electric vehicles crucial
GM and other auto makers have a lot at stake in the safety of the lithium-ion batteries used in the Volt. Electrics are an essential part of their strategy to meet tough federal gas-mileage standards that call for fleet averages of 35 MPG by 2016 and 54 MPG by 2025. New technologies like electric vehicles get special credits in those calculations.
Volt competitor Nissan Leaf uses similar batteries but has not had fire problems in NHTSA crash tests. Ford and Mitsubishi are bringing out electric models next year that also will use the lithium-ion batteries.
Top crash ratings
In earlier, separate crash tests, both Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf received the Top Safety Pick rating from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety after scoring well in tests for front, side, rear and rollover accidents. No special battery problems emerged in those tests. The Leaf is an all-electric vehicle, but the Volt has a backup gasoline generator.
In its statement, NHTSA offered some advice for current owners of electric cars involved in accidents.
-- Exit the vehicle carefully if possible just as in a gasoline-powered car, which of course also poses fire danger in a crash.
-- Emergency responders should take note if a vehicle is electric and disconnect the battery pack if possible.
-- Tow-truck operators and salvage yards should store damaged electrics outside, not inside a closed building. (All fires in the NHTSA tests ignited weeks after the initial damage).
Popular on MoneyWatch
- Reverse cell phone lookup service is free and simple
- Amy's Baking Company could face legal 'nightmare'
- 4 Things Not to Buy at Costco
- When it comes to vacations, the U.S. stinks 117 Comments
- Top 10 professional life coaching myths
- TGI Fridays nailed for doctoring booze
- Amy's Baking Company: Post-meltdown PR campaign
- 12 great college graduation gift ideas













Non are electric cars. There are 8000 Volts world wide and no real-world problems.
It's all media hype. It sells.
I love my Volt!
I have 11,000 oil free miles this year, powered by my Volts battery, charged with my home's power.
I've needed only 22 gallons of gas this year! Take that big oil!
I'm not giving you my money so you can continue to buy Congress. I'm keeping my money here in America. I'm not giving it to your lobbyists who keep Congress from passing any good energy legislation.
I'm spending it here in my town's economy buying locally made electricity._We have to stop sending $400B a YEAR out of our country to buy foreign oil. That money never comes back into our economy. We need to spend it here in our country. We need to buy cheaper electrons at 1/5 the cost of gas and keep most of our money for ourselves.
Then WE can buy Congress! :)
This article also highlights a HUGE flaw in GM's design of the battery. The battery in the chevy volt is prone to thermal runaway. It makes more sense in the battery design to use smaller cells that can be cooled by air if need be.