S.Korea battery maker apologizes for deadly fire but says it complied
with safety rules
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[June 25, 2024]
By Hyunsu Yim, Dogyun Kim and Daewoung Kim
HWASEONG, South Korea (Reuters) -The CEO of a South Korean lithium
battery manufacturer apologized on Tuesday following a massive factory
fire that killed 23 workers, but said the company had complied with all
required safety precautions and training.
The fire on Monday, which began at a factory with 35,000 lithium
batteries, produced thick smoke that spread quickly and the workers
inside the second-floor location likely lost consciousness and succumbed
within seconds, fire officials said.
Firefighters with search dogs combed the gutted structure on Tuesday in
Hwaseong, an industrial cluster southwest of the capital Seoul, and
found the last person who had been unaccounted for, raising the death
toll to 23.
Seventeen of those who died were Chinese, and one was Laotian. The rest
were South Koreans.
Most of them were temporary workers at the plant which is run by South
Korea-based Aricell, majority-owned by S-Connect.
Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers in South Korea are at risk from
accidents like the factory fire, as they make up a large portion of the
workforce but face a greater risk of injury or death.
Aricell CEO Park Soon-kwan offered condolences to the workers who were
killed and apologized to everyone who had been affected by the accident.
"We will be conscientiously taking part in the investigation by
authorities and will do our best to determine the cause of the accident
and to take measures to prevent a repeat of such an accident," Park told
reporters at the scene of the fire.
Officials from agencies including the National Forensic Service, police
and the fire department entered the factory as part of a joint
investigation.
The fire was the latest industrial accident in a country where dozens of
manufacturing workers lose their lives on the job each year despite
repeated calls to improve workplace safety.
"I ask the ministries of labor and industry and the National Fire Agency
to conduct an urgent safety inspection and, where there is concern of an
accident, take immediate measures," Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said at
a cabinet meeting.
Park, the Aricell CEO, said the company had fully complied with safety
procedures and training, but more than half of the 103 workers at the
factory, including some of those killed, were contract workers
dispatched by a manpower company.
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Firefighters take a break as rescue work continues following 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
Established in 2020, Aricell makes lithium primary batteries for
sensors and radio communication devices. It has 48 full-time
employees, according to its latest regulatory filing and its
LinkedIn profile.
Its parent S-Connect supplies lithium-ion battery parts to Samsung
SDI, one of the country's major secondary battery makers, according
to S-Connect's website.
Regulatory filings showed Aricell recorded a 2.6 billion won ($1.9
million) operating loss last year on 4.8 billion won revenue, and a
14% increase in accumulated debt to 23.8 billion won. It has
recorded net losses every year since its founding.
Shares of S-Connect, registered on the junior Kosdaq index, were
trading 1.37% lower on Tuesday after plunging 22.5% on Monday
following the news of the fire.
A labor ministry official told Reuters it was investigating whether
Aricell complied with safety regulations and gave adequate safety
training for temporary foreign workers.
Violations of those regulations are subject to criminal prosecution,
the official said, requesting anonymity.
When the fire started, sparks burst and white smoke rose, followed
by several explosions from piles of batteries, according to a video
footage of the inside of the factory, shown on local media.
The workers tried to contain the flame with extinguishers but
failed, and the factory room was soon engulfed in smoke, the video
showed.
Reuters could not independently confirm the authenticity of the
video.
Many of the bodies remain unidentified.
Reuters journalists saw some wailing family members trying to enter
the site, which had been cordoned off.
($1 = 1,386.2000 won)
(Reporting by Hyunsu Yim, Daewoung Kim, Dogyun Kim in Hwaseong, Ju-min
Park, Heekyong Yang in Seoul; Writing by Jack Kim; Editing by
Stephen Coates, Jamie Freed and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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