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Govt orders probe into Tata Nexon EV fire incident
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IANS | 24 Jun, 2022
The
government has ordered a probe into Tata Motors' Nexon EV fire incident
in Mumbai, as the company was investigating the "isolated thermal
incident".
The Defence Research and Development
Organisation (DRDO), which was earlier tasked with investigating
electric two-wheeler fire incidents by the Union Road Transport and
Highways Ministry, would lead the probe into Nexon EV fire too.
The
DRDO probe had found serious defects in the batteries. These defects
occurred because the electric two-wheeler manufacturers like Okinawa
Autotech, Pure EV, Jitendra Electric Vehicles, Ola Electric and Boom
Motors may have used "lower-grade materials to cut costs".
A Tata
Nexon EV caught fire in Mumbai and the company said on Thursday a
detailed investigation is currently being conducted to ascertain the
facts of the recent isolated thermal incident that is doing the rounds
on social media.
The EV car fire incident was reported from Vasai West (near Panchvati hotel) in Mumbai late on Wednesday.
"We
will share a detailed response after our complete investigation. We
remain committed to the safety of our vehicles and their users," the
company said in a statement.
Tata Nexon EV is the highest selling
electric car in India and at least 2,500-3,000 cars are being sold
every month in the country.
The company has so far sold over 30,000 EVs, most of which are Nexon models.
"This
is a first incident after more than 30,000 EVs have cumulatively
covered over 100 million km across the country in nearly four years,"
said the company.
As fires and explosions in electric
two-wheelers continue unabated, the government is all set to introduce
EV battery standards (BIS standards) for EV two-wheelers that will be
expanded to four-wheelers at a later stage.
The BIS standards for
EV batteries will look into "size, connectors, specification and
minimum quality of cells, the battery's capacity".
Earlier, NITI
Aayog in a discussion paper also stressed upon the need for BIS
standards as the first step towards a national battery swapping policy.
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