<p>As the electric vehicle (EV) industry awaits new government quality-centric guidelines, another e-scooter belonging to Pure EV went into flames in Gujarat.</p>.<p>The fire incident occurred at a house in Suvidhinath Society in Patan district on Thursday when the Pure EV's EPluto 7G e-scooter was being charged, as seen in a video that went viral on social media.</p>.<p>In the video, one can see the scooter in flames and the charger that is still plugged in the e-scooter. No casualties were reported.</p>.<p>This was the fifth incident of fire related to Pure Energy's electric scooters.</p>.<p>Pure EV was yet to release a statement about the cause of the fire.</p>.<p>To date, four other Pure EV e-scooters caught fire, the fourth one being reported last month from Hyderabad.</p>.<p>Pure EV had recalled 2,000 electric scooters in April.</p>.<p>As fires and explosions in electric two-wheelers continue unabated, the government is all set to introduce EV battery standards (BIS standards) for EV two-wheelers that will be expanded to four-wheelers at a later stage.</p>.<p>The BIS standards for EV batteries will look into "size, connectors, specification and minimum quality of cells, the battery's capacity".</p>.<p>NITI Aayog, in a recent discussion paper, also stressed upon the need for BIS standards as the first step towards a national battery swapping policy.</p>.<p>The preliminary findings from the government-constituted probe committee on EV fires also identified issues with battery cells or design in nearly all of the electric two-wheeler fire incidents in the country.</p>.<p>The experts found defects in battery cells as well as battery design in nearly all EV fires.</p>.<p>The government is now working on new quality-centric guidelines for EVs that will be unveiled soon.</p>.<p>Last month, the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA), which comes under the Union Consumer Affairs Ministry, sent notices to Pure EV and Boom Motors after their e-scooters exploded in April.</p>
<p>As the electric vehicle (EV) industry awaits new government quality-centric guidelines, another e-scooter belonging to Pure EV went into flames in Gujarat.</p>.<p>The fire incident occurred at a house in Suvidhinath Society in Patan district on Thursday when the Pure EV's EPluto 7G e-scooter was being charged, as seen in a video that went viral on social media.</p>.<p>In the video, one can see the scooter in flames and the charger that is still plugged in the e-scooter. No casualties were reported.</p>.<p>This was the fifth incident of fire related to Pure Energy's electric scooters.</p>.<p>Pure EV was yet to release a statement about the cause of the fire.</p>.<p>To date, four other Pure EV e-scooters caught fire, the fourth one being reported last month from Hyderabad.</p>.<p>Pure EV had recalled 2,000 electric scooters in April.</p>.<p>As fires and explosions in electric two-wheelers continue unabated, the government is all set to introduce EV battery standards (BIS standards) for EV two-wheelers that will be expanded to four-wheelers at a later stage.</p>.<p>The BIS standards for EV batteries will look into "size, connectors, specification and minimum quality of cells, the battery's capacity".</p>.<p>NITI Aayog, in a recent discussion paper, also stressed upon the need for BIS standards as the first step towards a national battery swapping policy.</p>.<p>The preliminary findings from the government-constituted probe committee on EV fires also identified issues with battery cells or design in nearly all of the electric two-wheeler fire incidents in the country.</p>.<p>The experts found defects in battery cells as well as battery design in nearly all EV fires.</p>.<p>The government is now working on new quality-centric guidelines for EVs that will be unveiled soon.</p>.<p>Last month, the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA), which comes under the Union Consumer Affairs Ministry, sent notices to Pure EV and Boom Motors after their e-scooters exploded in April.</p>