Tesla truck fire took 190,000 liters of water to extinguish
NEW YORK—US firefighters used some 190,000 liters of water to extinguish a blaze involving an electric Tesla Semi truck this month following a crash, a government agency said.
Besides water to cool the vehicle’s batteries, California firefighters also “used an aircraft to apply fire retardant to the immediate area as a precautionary measure,” said the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in a statement released Thursday.
The crash involving the Tesla Semi took place in the wee hours of Aug. 19 as the vehicle was traveling near Emigrant Gap in California, the NTSB said.
The semitruck operated by a Tesla employee was headed from Livermore, California, to a Tesla facility in Sparks, Nevada.
The vehicle veered off the road while navigating a curve and struck a tree, before going down a slope to rest against several trees, the report added.
The driver was not injured.
Aircraft mobilized
But “the vehicle’s lithium-ion electric battery system ignited after the roadway departure, resulting in a postcrash fire,” said the NTSB.
It took about 50,000 gallons of water—nearly 190,000 liters—to extinguish the flames and cool the vehicle’s batteries, the agency said.
California firefighters also mobilized an aircraft to drop retardant around the crash site.
California suffers from numerous forest fires every summer, which are destructive and sometimes fatal.
AFP is one of the world's three major news agencies, and the only European one. Its mission is to provide rapid, comprehensive, impartial and verified coverage of the news and issues that shape our daily lives.
Controlling nature