George, that's great to see! I'm not too surprised to see some (likely most) battery shippers are trying to ship within the ever changing regs. I had both of my ebikes (Easy Motion & ProdecoTech), with batteries shipped to me and both were done in the same way and by ground. Not only does it need the proper documentation and labeling, but the packing materials have to be of a certain type and grade.
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After posting that listing from Amazon, I looked again and noticed several listings of "ebike" LiPo batteries from the same company with instruction to ignore the labeling, it's just a dodge to be able to ship by air freight. LiPo, typically used in RC stuff can be extremely dangerous, that's evident by the fact most advise to store LiPo in fire proof and even explosion proof containers.
It's difficult to keep on top of all this and worse when one is trying to get up to speed with the tech side of LEV's and batteries. Being the receiver, it's almost as important to know the transport issues as it is for the shipper. I like many of us have to do a lot long distance, I made sure to keep all the shipping materials from both my ebikes. There's a good article written by an expert in dangerous goods shipping, he notes these 7 key points:
- With few exceptions, all lithium cells must be tested according to strict UN standards which provide specific criteria. These tests are designed (among other things) to simulate real world conditions, including conditions normally incident to transportation.
- Many companies purchase tested cells — i.e. lithium ion cells from suppliers in China — and then construct a battery out of these approved cells. These batteries or subsequent battery packs must then be tested again.
- The penalties for failing to properly package or properly offer for transport a lithium battery can carry fines of up to $55,000 dollars per package per day. This is for accidental violation of the rules where there is no intent to “wilfully” violate the requirements. “Wilful” violations can involve criminal prosecution and penaltites — especially if there is death, injury or property damage that is a result of this intentional disregard of the regulations.
- Many SDS are just plain wrong when it comes to lithium battery shipping information. Any SDS over 3 years old should be suspect as the rules have been in constant flux over the last 8 years or so. Any SDS/MSDS that references the term “excepted by Special Provision A45” is horribly out of date.
- Could you ever see your company in a position where your customers might have to return a lithium battery or lithium battery powered device to you as part of your returns or reverse logistics process? Be careful! In order to ship some of these batteries, your customer (if they are a business), may have to train and certify their employees before they can legally offer a shipment of these products to a commercial carrier (i.e. an LTL trucker or freight company), and they have to comply with the shipping regulations.
- Beware of helpful employees or colleagues bearing mis-information about lithium battery shipping. The most prevalent piece of bad advice goes something like this: “Oh, don’t worry, it’s an ‘excepted’ lithium battery because it’s under 100 Wh or 2 grams — it’s not restricted.” That piece of bad information is pervasive and even many of the carriers don’t understand the nuances of the rules. Your response should be: there is never a circumstance (ever) where a lithium battery is non-restricted. Period.
- The operative question to ask is: Which regulations do apply under our circumstances and to what extent does it restrict my ability to ship our product with the least hassle, least cost, and the highest level of safety.
Full article:
http://www.manufacturing.net/articl...lity-shipping-lithium-battery-powered-devices
Other refrences: