South Korea battery plant fire kills 22 people, most of them Chinese,
officials say
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[June 24, 2024]
By Daewoung Kim and Hongji Kim
HWASEONG, South Korea (Reuters) - A powerful explosion set on fire a
lithium battery factory in South Korea on Monday, killing 22 workers,
most of them Chinese nationals, local fire officials said.
The fire, which has largely been extinguished, ripped through a factory
run by battery manufacturer Aricell in Hwaseong, a major industrial
cluster about 90 minutes southwest of the capital Seoul.
Eighteen Chinese workers and one Laotian were among the dead. The
nationality of the remaining deceased worker was not yet confirmed, Kim
Jin-young, a local fire official, told reporters, citing information
from company officials.
The blaze began at 10:31 a.m. (0131 GMT) after a series of battery cells
exploded inside a warehouse with some 35,000 units, Kim said. What had
triggered the explosion remains unclear, he added.
A Reuters witness saw firefighters moving up to six bodies out of the
factory. Due to the intensity of the blaze, rescuers were finding it
difficult to identify the dead, Kim added.
Two people were being treated for major burns, officials at the scene
said.
Live TV footage showed firefighters spraying the damaged steel and
concrete building. Parts of the upper level had collapsed, and large
chunks of the building looked like they had been blown out into the
street by an explosion. Aerial footage showed massive smoke clouds
billowing from the structure.
Kim Jae-ho, Fire and Disaster Prevention professor at Daejeon
University, said the fire had probably spread too quickly for workers to
escape.
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A firefighter inspects the site of a deadly fire at a lithium
battery factory owned by South Korean battery maker Aricell, in
Hwaseong, South Korea, June 24, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Hong-ji
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"Battery materials such as nickel are easily flammable," he said.
"So often, there is not enough time to respond, compared to a fire
caused by other materials."
President Yoon Suk Yeol was monitoring the situation, his office
said, while Interior Minister Lee Sang-min called on the local
authorities to take steps to prevent any hazardous chemicals from
contaminating the surroundings.
Established in 2020, Aricell makes lithium primary batteries for
sensors and radio communication devices. It has 48 employees,
according to its latest regulatory filing and its Linkedin profile.
Calls to Aricell offices were unanswered.
The company is not listed on South Korea's stock market but is
majority owned by S-Connect, according to Aricell regulatory filing.
S-Connect is registered on the junior Kosdaq index and its shares
closed down 22.5%.
South Korea, a major industrial economy, has made efforts to improve
its safety record after several past accidents, many of which have
been blamed on negligence.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin, Ju-min Park, Joyce Lee and Heekyong
Yang, writing by Jack Kim; Editing by Kim Coghill and Miral Fahmy)
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