In 2025, UK firefighters attended a lithium-ion battery fire every five hours. Almost a third of the 1,760 incidents were e-bikes. The phone in your pocket is, on the underlying data, one of the safer lithium-ion objects in your house.
That is the headline behind a story the gadget-list version of this beat usually misses. The 1,760 figure is up 147% over three years, according to a QBE Insurance freedom-of-information survey of 46 of 52 UK fire brigades, reported by the Guardian in May 2026. London alone recorded 230 e-bike fires and five related deaths over the past three years. The devices most often involved are not factory-certified e-bikes from major brands. They are retrofitted bikes, conversion kits, and aftermarket battery packs, the same Guardian/QBE reporting notes, with the National Fire Chiefs Council and London Fire Brigade publicly backing that assessment. E-bike callouts in the UK rose from 149 in 2022 to 520 in 2025, a 3.5x jump that outruns the overall lithium-ion increase.
The phone and the laptop are, in raw incident terms, the safest lithium-ion objects in the room. They ship with battery-management systems, third-party safety certifications, and tight firmware-charger coordination. The risk gradient climbs as you move down-market and up-energy-density: cheap replacement cells bought online, vaping devices, hoverboards and e-scooters, and at the top of the incident pyramid, e-bike packs and large portable power stations. A single 1 kWh e-bike pack stores the energy equivalent of roughly 60 phone batteries, in a casing that is routinely fast-charged in a hallway, overnight, next to a wall. Forty-six percent of all UK lithium-ion battery fires in 2025 started in someone's home.
The mechanism behind all of these fires is the same. Lithium-ion cells fail by thermal runaway: a self-heating chain reaction in which the cell generates heat faster than it can shed it, and the heat cascades into adjacent cells in the pack. The triggers are finite and knowable. The ZDNET explainer that surfaced the underlying dataset lists them as physical damage (a dropped phone, a punctured pack, a wheel-bent e-bike frame), overcharging with a mismatched or damaged charger, internal short circuits, exposure to high ambient heat, manufacturing defects, and the use of cheap or counterfeit cells that lack the safety circuitry of branded ones. Cheap cells are the through-line. They underprice the certification and quality-control steps that make a phone battery safe, and they ship in products where the consequences of failure scale with the pack size.
The warning signs are the same across all of these devices, and they precede a flame by minutes, sometimes hours. A cell that is about to run away gets hot to the touch in a way the device has never been before. It swells; the screen lifts, the case warps, the pack no longer sits flush. It may hiss, crackle, or pop, and it often gives off an acrid, sweet chemical smell before any smoke is visible. Runtime collapses for no obvious reason. A laptop that used to last six hours dies in forty minutes, a phone shuts off at 30%, a power station drains overnight on the shelf. Any one of these is grounds to stop charging, move the device onto a hard, non-flammable surface outdoors, and replace the cell or the device.
A second property makes lithium-ion fires unusually dangerous: reignition. A cell that has been "extinguished" can reignite minutes, hours, or even days later, because the runaway reaction inside the cell continues without flame. Fire services, from the UK's NFCC and London Fire Brigade to US fire-safety guidance, therefore treat a lithium-ion fire as a long-duration event, not a single knock-down. The first thirty seconds are the part the gadget listicle does not cover. The consistent guidance is to evacuate the area, close the door to slow the fire's spread, and call the fire service rather than try to fight a pack-level fire with a home extinguisher. The only consumer-scale tool with a defensible role is a LiPo-safe bag or a fire blanket, used to contain a small, single-cell event in its first seconds, not a pack that is already venting or burning.
The regulatory picture explains how the risk reached this scale. The National Fire Chiefs Council has stated publicly that regulation and consumer guidance have not kept pace with the technology, and has called for stronger industry action on product safety. UK regulators are moving on disposable vapes, the Guardian reports, and Zurich UK has publicly flagged vape fires as a rising insurance exposure. On the other side of the Atlantic, TÜV SÜD has cited roughly 25,000 US lithium-ion fire and overheating incidents over five years, a figure widely repeated by industry but not independently primary-verified for this story. The Federal Aviation Administration logs close to two lithium-battery fires per week on US aircraft, according to CTIF reporting cited in the ZDNET explainer. None of these bodies publish a unified certification mark a buyer can read on a package.
So the protection on the page is not a shopping list. It is a small set of behaviors applied to the right devices. Inspect any e-bike, scooter, or replacement battery pack for casing damage, swelling, or a cell that no longer sits flush. Buy replacement cells only from the device's original manufacturer or a named, certifiable supplier; if a deal on a 5 Ah pack looks too cheap to be a real cell, it is a counterfeit or a reclaimed one. Charge large packs on a hard, non-flammable surface, away from exits, and never through the night unattended. Store e-bike and power-station packs in a LiPo bag or a fire-resistant container. Do not charge a device that is hot, swollen, or under recall. Take a damaged or swollen pack to a hazardous-waste drop-off, not the bin. And if a pack does run away, leave the building. The fire service has the equipment and the time. The room does not have either.
What to watch next is whether the e-bike standard EN 15194 and the US e-mobility standard UL 2849 begin to function as the kind of mark a buyer can actually use, and whether insurers start to refuse cover on uncertified packs the way some already refuse cover on retrofitted conversions. The data behind the headline is real, the failure mode is mechanical, and the next fire, in most cases, was preventable at the charger.