Business

Hyundai Motor’s electric bus catches fire in South Korea

Published by linker 5

Posted on February 16, 2021

2 min read

· Last updated: January 21, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google
Hyundai electric bus catches fire in South Korea during inspection - Global Banking & Finance Review
An electric bus manufactured by Hyundai Motor caught fire while returning to the garage after inspection. This incident raises concerns about electric vehicle safety, particularly regarding battery issues.
Global Banking & Finance Awards 2026 — Call for Entries

SEOUL (Reuters) – An electric bus manufactured by Hyundai Motor Co caught fire on Monday while in use in South Korea, a fire official said on Tuesday, months after similar fires in electric cars led to a recall to inspect batteries. No one was injured in the incident, which occurred as the empty bus was […]

SEOUL (Reuters) – An electric bus manufactured by Hyundai Motor Co caught fire on Monday while in use in South Korea, a fire official said on Tuesday, months after similar fires in electric cars led to a recall to inspect batteries.

No one was injured in the incident, which occurred as the empty bus was returning to the garage after an inspection, an official at the Fire Service Headquarters in the southeastern city of Changwon said.

The maker of the batteries in the bus has not been identified, the fire official said, but local media reports said the Elec City bus was powered by LG Chem’s wholly owned battery division LG Energy Solution’s batteries.

“Officials from Hyundai Motor, the transport ministry, Korea Automobile Testing & Research Institute, National Fire Research Institute and Changwon Fire Service Headquarters are expected to have a meeting on Tuesday to discuss inspection,” the fire official told Reuters.

Neither Hyundai Motor nor LG Energy Solution had an immediate comment.

In October, Hyundai recalled 25,564 Kona electric vehicles (EV) in South Korea over the risk of a short circuit possibly caused by faulty manufacturing of its high-voltage battery cells.

After a fire in a Kona EV that had been recalled and received a software update, South Korean authorities have launched a probe into the adequacy of the voluntary recall, under which only some vehicles get batteries replaced.

Shares of Hyundai Motor was trading down 0.2%, while the broader KOSPI market’s was up 0.3% as of 0447 GMT.

(Reporting by Heekyong Yang. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

Related Articles

More from Business

Explore more articles in the Business category