Recent figures (published May 2026) show that:
- UK fire services attended about 1,760 lithium‑ion battery fires in 2025 [theguardian.com]
- That equals roughly 4.8 fires per day — or one every five hours [qbeeurope.com]
- Incidents have risen by around 147% in just three years [theguardian.com]
So yes — the “every five hours” claim is real and based on nationwide data gathered from fire brigades.
📈 What’s driving the surge
The rise is strongly linked to how common rechargeable devices have become:
1) Everyday tech
Lithium‑ion batteries are in:
- Phones, laptops, tablets
- Power banks and tools
- Vapes and e‑cigarettes
Around 45% of incidents involve common consumer electronics [internatio…ournal.com]
2) E‑bikes and scooters (biggest contributor)
- 520 fires in 2025 involved e‑bikes alone [qbeeurope.com]
- That’s nearly one‑third of all battery fires [theguardian.com]
A key issue:
- DIY conversion kits and cheap or incompatible chargers are often involved [ibtimes.co.uk]
3) Where fires are happening
- 46% occur in homes
- 31% outdoors
- 23% in commercial buildings [internatio…ournal.com]
So this isn’t just an industrial problem — it’s largely a domestic safety issue.
🔥 Why lithium batteries are so dangerous
These fires behave very differently from normal fires.
The main cause is something called thermal runaway:
- The battery overheats internally
- A chain reaction starts
- It generates its own heat and oxygen
- It can rapidly ignite or explode
Key triggers include:
- Overcharging or using the wrong charger
- Physical damage (drops, impacts)
- Manufacturing faults
- Heat exposure
What makes them especially risky:
- They can burn extremely hot (hundreds of °C or more)
- Fires are hard to extinguish
- They can release toxic gases
- They may reignite after being put out
⚠️ Why this is becoming a bigger issue now
There are two big trends:
1) Explosive growth in battery use
A typical home now contains 15–25 battery‑powered devices [qbeeurope.com]
2) Cheap, unregulated products
Authorities highlight risks from:
- Counterfeit batteries
- Poor‑quality chargers
- Unregulated online purchases
🧠 Bottom line
- The “every five hours” figure is accurate
- Fires are rising rapidly across the UK
- Most are linked to everyday devices, not just vehicles
- The biggest concern is unregulated or mishandled batteries
✅ Practical safety tips (worth knowing)
Fire services recommend:
- Use manufacturer-approved chargers only
- Avoid charging overnight or unattended
- Keep batteries away from heat and flammable materials
- Don’t use damaged devices
- Recycle batteries properly (don’t bin them)
