Hyundai Could Expand Recalls Over Kona EV Fire Risk

by Oct 23, 2020All News, Hyundai, Slider0 comments

kona fire

Last week we have informed you that Hyundai were recalling more than 25k units of Kona electric vehicle in South Korea due to battery cell fire risks, but now and according to YonHap news agency, they also planning to recall about 51,000 vehicles in Europe, North America, China and other markets due to the same defect.

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Hyundai said in a statement on Monday that it “is in the final stages of filing a voluntary recall notice with the NHTSA (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) for U.S. Kona EVs and will start the process of informing owners of these vehicles.”

Hyundai will recall 37,366 vehicles in Europe and 11,137 vehicles in North America, according to the South Korean news agency Yonhap. The Hyundai statement did not mention the other markets, the total number of additional electric vehicles it intends to recall or the dates of the recalls.

South Korea’s transport ministry said last week that Hyundai will voluntarily recall its Kona EVs, as a possible short circuit due to what may be faulty manufacturing of its high-voltage battery cells could pose a fire risk.

At least 16 cases of Kona EVs catching fire have been reported globally, including in Canada and Australia in 2019, according to Yonhap. One of the incidents took place in the South Korean city of Daegu, where a Kona vehicle parked in an underground lot caught fire.

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While that, LG Chem, which supplies batteries for Kona EVs, said last week that faulty battery cells were not the cause of fires in Kona EVs, and the exact cause had not been determined. The supplier aid a re-enactment experiment conducted jointly with Hyundai had not led to a fire, so the fires could not be attributed to faulty battery cells. LG Chem declined on Monday to comment beyond what it said last week.

Recalled Kona EVs in South Korea will undergo software updates for all affected models and battery replacements of select models after inspections.

KB Investment & Securities said in a report on Monday it could cost Hyundai as much as 600 billion won ($522.1 million) if they offer battery replacements for the nearly 77,000 affected vehicles identified worldwide so far. 

Written by Jose Antonio Lopez

Passionated about Korean cars from Hyundai, Kia & Genesis. Photographer. I love being in nature, hiking. Tech lover.

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