A 12-foot underwater drone hauling “a large amount” of lithium-ion cells torched itself on a Rhode Island trailer, proving the chemistry can ignite anywhere—even below sea level—if the pack is damaged, wet, or over-heated.
What Actually Happened on Route 24
On 4 Feb 2026, a flat-bed trailer hauling a 12-foot research-class underwater drone caught fire on the Route 24 on-ramp in Tiverton, Rhode Island. BGR reports that the blaze originated inside the drone’s lithium-ion battery bay, forcing a three-hour closure while a state haz-mat team cooled the cells to halt thermal runaway.
Why Water Makes Lithium-Ion Angrier, Not Safer
Lithium metal wants to react with water. When a cell’s casing cracks—common in a grounding accident or deep-water pressure cycle—H₂O seeps in, generating heat, hydrogen gas, and caustic lithium hydroxide. The internal short that follows can push the cell past 150 °C; neighboring cells follow, releasing more flammable electrolyte vapor, feeding a self-sustaining fire even inside a pressure hull.
From Seabed to Highway: One Chemistry, Many Victims
- 2019: An ROV lithium pack exploded on the deck of the research vessel Atlantic Explorer, hospitalizing two technicians.
- 2021: A consumer underwater scooter fire in Santa Monica spread to a garage and destroyed three cars.
- 2024: The U.S. Navy’s Unmanned Undersea Vehicle program switched to semi-solid lithium-iron-phosphate packs after two thermal events inside pressure vessels.
What Pilots, Rental Firms, and DIY Builders Should Do Right Now
1. UL-certified packs only. If the drone ships with bare, pink-wrap 18650s, swap them for a factory-sealed, pressure-rated module.
2. Pressure-test yearly. A 5 % drop in housing integrity can let seawater wick into the battery compartment.
3. Install dual-layer temperature sensors. One inside the pack, one on the hull interior; both feeding a hard-cutoff at 60 °C.
4. Transport dry and discharged. The Tiverton unit was reportedly at 80 % state-of-charge—illegal for air freight and risky for road transit.
Emerging Escape Routes: Solid-State & Sodium-Ion
Start-ups such as QuantumScape and CATL are sampling solid-state cells that trade liquid electrolyte for ceramic, cutting fire risk by >80 %. Meanwhile, AOL notes fast-charging sodium-ion packs entering drone trials—heavier, but chemically indifferent to water. Expect first maritime packs in late 2027.
Bottom Line
A lithium-ion battery doesn’t care if it’s 100 ft under the Atlantic or strapped to a pickup truck: compromise the housing, add moisture, and you’ve built a portable inferno. Treat every sub-sea drone like a potential fireworks crate—insulate, isolate, and keep a fire blanket within reach.
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