Gov't proposes improved EV battery information for customers to alleviate fire concerns

Home > Business > Industry

print dictionary print

Gov't proposes improved EV battery information for customers to alleviate fire concerns

Officials inspect an electric vehicle that burned down due to a battery explosion in August 2024 in Cheongna, Incheon. [YONHAP]

Officials inspect an electric vehicle that burned down due to a battery explosion in August 2024 in Cheongna, Incheon. [YONHAP]

 
Customers will soon be able to check key information about batteries when purchasing an EV, such as the manufacturer and country of origin, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said Sunday.
 
The Transport Ministry said such revisions will be included in proposed amendments to two related laws, including the enforcement rules of the Motor Vehicle Management Act.
 

Related Article

 
Under the proposed revision, the number of EV battery-related pieces of information available to customers will be expanded from six to 10 items. The information set to be newly opened to the public includes the battery's manufacturer, country of origin, product name and manufacturing date, the ministry said. Currently, customers can access only information about the battery's function, such as its capacity and rated voltage.
 
The ministry also plans to raise fines for carmakers and sellers that fail to disclose required battery information to a maximum of 10 million won ($6,600).
 
The ministry established a new standard to revoke safety certifications if the same defect occurs two to four times within a two-year period, with the severity of the measures depending on the nature of the flaw.
 
It said certification will be revoked if a battery has a design or manufacturing defect that fails to meet safety standards and results in a fire or other damage on two occasions. For defects that meet technical standards but still pose a safety hazard that results in a fire or damage, the certification will be revoked after three such occurrences.
 
Korea reported 334 EV battery fires during the one-year period ending Saturday, up from 270 cases during the previous 12-month period, according to National Fire Agency data.
 
The ministry expected the new rules to improve customers' right to know and help encourage EV purchases by strengthening confidence in batteries.

Yonhap
Log in to Twitter or Facebook account to connect
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
help-image Social comment?
s
lock icon

To write comments, please log in to one of the accounts.

Standards Board Policy (0/250자)