General Motors hosted two days of training exercises in Thornburg, Virginia, this week, teaching local first responders how to safely handle electric vehicle fires and crashes.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping to put to rest many of the fears and dispel some of the misconceptions about electrified vehicles鈥 among rescuers, said Joseph McLaine, General Motors global product safety and systems engineer.
The training exercises took place at Dominion Raceway in Thornburg and involved dozens of the region鈥檚 fire and police agencies. An FBI team came by to observe, McLaine said.
One common misconception is that water can be dangerous around an EV battery during a fire.
鈥淲e say in all of our rescue documents, copious amounts of water need to be applied,鈥 McLaine said.
Emergency workers got to look at a Chevy Bolt that caught fire. That model has been the subject of a recall because of a battery defect that鈥檚 been blamed on supplier LG.
First responders also checked out a GMC Hummer EV that crashed, so they could learn where to safely cut to get someone out of the vehicle.
鈥淭he color orange identifies things that may be under hood or in locations of the vehicle that we do not want first responders interacting with,鈥 McLaine said.
In a news release, GM said the National Fire Protection Association 鈥渉as led its own education efforts around EVs with 300,000 first responders but estimates there are .鈥
