Dame (Basingstoke) (Con)
I beg to move,
That leave be given to bring in a Bill to make local fire
services statutory consultees for industrial lithium-ion battery
storage planning permission applications; to make provision about
the granting of environmental permits for industrial lithium-ion
battery storage; and for connected purposes.
The Bill would ensure that industrial lithium-ion battery storage
facilities are correctly categorised as hazardous, so that the
Environment Agency, the Health and Safety Executive and the fire
and rescue services would be statutory consultees when planning
applications are considered.
Technological innovation is on an exponential curve, and nowhere
is that more evident than in renewable energy generation. Under
this Government, in 2019—for the first time ever—zero-carbon
electricity production overtook fossil fuels. This transition to
renewables is essential to protect our environment, but is also
crucial geopolitically. We know only too well that hostile powers
are willing to use energy supplies as a weapon. Home-grown
renewable energy can help to shield us from attacks. With
renewable energy, capture and storage become crucial. A library
of Government plans and reports since 2017 cite the removal of
barriers to electricity storage as crucial in our transition to
greener energy.
The high water mark of energy storage is industrial lithium
batteries, which make up more than 90% of the UK’s storage
capacity. By releasing energy into the power grids when it is
required, these batteries shift peaks of supply to match demand,
providing us with renewable electricity even when the air is
still and the skies are grey. A handful of storage facilities are
already operational in the UK, but a large number are due to come
on stream in coming years; 366 projects are under construction or
awaiting planning permission.
So what is the problem? Lithium-ion batteries are innocuous when
they function normally, but if they fail, a process called
thermal runaway—what we would call a battery fire—occurs, and
there is a complex chemical reaction. It can occur for many
reasons: the battery may be overcharged, there may be outside
interference or the battery may have a design fault. The only way
to stop a battery fire is to cool it down with a constant stream
of water and wait for the fire to go out, which might take days,
creating huge quantities of water containing highly corrosive
hydrofluoric acid and copper oxide—by-products of battery fires.
These toxic chemicals cannot be allowed to seep into
watercourses, because they would cause immense environmental
damage.
Current regulations do not require battery storage planning
applications to be referred to the Environment Agency, the Health
and Safety Executive or, indeed, the fire service. Planning
permission is being granted near nurseries, hospitals, houses,
rivers and even industrial chemical manufacturing plants. In my
constituency, a battery facility has been granted planning
permission on Basing fen, metres away from the headwaters of the
River Loddon, close to a hospital and near the town centre. The
application was only spotted by assiduous local residents and
local councillors Kate Tuck—who is with us today—and Onnalee
Cubitt when a further application was submitted for a larger
site. Should a fire break out at the storage facility on Basing
fen, the water used to cool the plant would flow straight into
the River Loddon. There is no requirement for a storage tank for
firewater. Toxic water would continue to wash downriver towards
the Thames.
A battery fire can produce a cloud of dangerous gas—hydrogen
fluoride, methane and carbon monoxide. If the vapour cloud from a
battery fire meets an ignition point, it can explode, as happened
in Arizona in 2019; fire officers tackling that battery fire
suffered life-changing injuries when the unit exploded. That fire
was far from unique. Thermal runaway events occur in almost every
country in which battery storage is used. Even South Korea, a
pioneer in the development of battery storage, experienced 23
major battery fires between 2017 and 2019. Nearer to home, in
September 2020 a battery storage facility fire in a residential
area in the constituency of the hon. Member for Liverpool, West
Derby (), a stone’s throw from a
nursery, caused a violent explosion that blew debris up to 20
metres. It took 59 hours for the fire to be put out, during which
residents were asked to keep their windows and doors closed
because of the billowing smoke.
We need lithium-ion battery storage facilities, but they must be
seen correctly for what they are: highly complex, with the
potential to create dangerous events and hazardous substances.
The good news is that we do not need new regulations; we simply
need to better use the regulations we have. We already have
robust legislation, the Planning (Hazardous Substances)
Regulations 2015 and the Control of Major Accident Hazards
Regulations 2015. My Bill would correctly apply those regulations
to battery storage sites.
We have to heed warnings from experts such as Dr Wade Allison,
professor of physics at Oxford University, who said that
“although batteries are essential to our world, naively
multiplying them while ignoring safety questions is dangerous and
negligent. That is what is happening. Large-scale battery energy
storage systems should be classed as hazardous establishments in
order to be regulated appropriately”.
By correctly categorising industrial lithium-ion batteries as
hazardous, my Bill would ensure that the Environment Agency and
the HSE were consulted during planning applications.
Furthermore, Phil Clark, the emerging energy technologies lead at
the National Fire Chiefs Council, has called for
“developers to engage at the earliest opportunity with the local
Fire and Rescue Services.”
He explains that
“the National Fire Chiefs Council are still learning about the
potential impact of the exponential introduction of lithium
batteries. Without an understanding of the risks and appropriate
control measures required, we risk as a society creating the next
legacy fire safety issue”—
his words, not mine. My Bill would make fire and rescue services
statutory consultees for all battery storage facilities.
The evidence shows that the current regulations for lithium-ion
battery storage facilities do not reflect the true risk. I urge
the Government to support my Bill today and to announce an
immediate review of those facilities that have already been
constructed or that have planning consent, to ensure that they do
not pose a threat to residents or the local environment.
I am not sure whether there is a Minister in place at the
moment—maybe there is a Whip.
(Bexleyheath and Crayford)
(Con)
indicated assent.
Dame
I hope that somebody will agree to meet me to discuss action in
more detail. We cannot allow lithium-ion battery storage
facilities to continue as they are and become another legacy fire
issue, with all the risks that that entails to the lives of the
people we represent and the environment we want to protect. I
commend the Bill to the House.
Question put and agreed to.
Ordered,
That Dame , , , , , , , , , , and present the Bill.
Dame accordingly presented the
Bill.
Bill read the First time; to be read a Second time on Friday 24
March 2023, and to be printed (Bill 152).