Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Matson Shipping Line Refuses Future Transportation Of EV’s

Matson Inc., a major ocean cargo carrier in the trans-Pacific trade, announced this week that they have decided to stop carrying electric vehicles and hybrid vehicles on their ships, effective immediately.
Some in the industry were shocked and upset. 
Matson, after all, has never had a ship sink as a result of an EV fire. What are they worried about?

There have been three especially severe EV fires on cargo ships in just the past three years: the Felicity Ace in 2022*, the Fremantle Highway in 2023, and most recently, the Morning Midas in 2025, each fire destroying thousands of vehicles each along with much or all of the vessels.
In the Fremantle Highway fire, one crewman died and sixteen more were injured, and the ship needed to be largely rebuilt and renamed.
In the Felicity Ace fire, all the crew members escaped without injury, but the ship sank, taking its cargo with it to the bottom of the ocean. A total loss.
In the most recent incident, the Morning Midas caught fire off the coast of Alaska, in the North Pacific; no injuries this time, but again the ship was a total loss.

In each case, many in the industry insist on denying the evidence in front of their eyes: despite eyewitness reports that each of these fires started in an electric car, some reporters and industry analysts, politically desperate to defend their precious EVs, insist that the cause of these fires is still unproven.  The evidence, after all, is hundreds of meters deep and utterly out of reach.
Matson, however, has no doubt, and neither have an increasing number of others in the transportation industry.

Statisticians will tell you that traditional gasoline-powered vehicles are more likely to be involved in car fires, and that’s true, but that’s not the whole story.  When ICE vehicles catch fire, it’s normally because they’ve been in a serious collision, resulting in an explosion.  But we have seen electric vehicle batteries catch fire almost spontaneously, from the mere exposure of the battery to water.  No collision necessary.
It rains outdoors almost everywhere in the populated world; driving on a typical road means going through puddles and splashing water up into the undercarriage all the time. And when sailing on a ship, the saltwater of the earth’s oceans is practically unavoidable.  A car simply has to be able to handle that.
Worse, once an electric car’s massive lithium battery catches fire, that fire is often impossible to put out; these vehicles burn for days, consuming not just the car but everything nearby, from parking garage to cargo ship.
By refusing to carry EVs and hybrids anymore, Matson ensures that the traditional gasoline-powered vehicles they carry will be safer; that’s worth more to their ICE customers, or at least, it will be, when this rationality sinks in.
Electric Vehicles already have a challenging business model, even without this newest problem:
EVs are more expensive than comparable traditional vehicles; they require generous government subsidies, not to make them cheap, but just to make them not quite so much more expensive.
EVs have such an energy-intensive manufacturing process, using so much petroleum and so many difficult-to-mine rare earths in their manufacture, that it doesn’t approach the level of environmental friendliness that the green crowd imagines, and one day that green crowd is bound to realize this unpleasant truth.
EVs require charging from the electric grid, a grid made more costly and undependable every year as nations foolishly reduce their use of “energy that works” (nuclear, coal, oil, natural gas) and increase their use of costly and inefficient “energy that doesn’t work” (wind and solar), reducing the ability of that electric grid to serve its customers.  Eventually, after more and more multi-hour waits for ever more expensive grid energy, these consumers are bound to realize that shortcoming as well.
More and more insurance companies, parking garages, and even neighborhoods are waking up to this fire risk and raising the possibility of resisting insuring EVs, or even allowing EVs to be kept in their properties, because of the way that these batteries have been known to cause uncontrollable fires.


*https://www.thedrive.com/news/its-been-exactly-one-year-since-the-felicity-ace-caught-fire-with-nearly-4000-cars-onboard

Read the rest:
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2025/07/major_shipping_line_matson_closes_the_hatch_on_transport_of_electrical_vehicles.html

6 comments:

  1. I wondered how long before insurance industries start outlawing stuff like this. There's on again/off again bans on storing cheap chinesium electric bikes and scooters in apartments in New York, apparently, due to the concern of burning down the entire apartment building. I would think insurance accountants would look at facts, figures, liabilities, and decide that electric vehicles just aren't worth it.

    Case in point, my ICE vehicle gets in minor fender bender. They can judge repair costs versus vehicle value and decide whether or not to fix it or total it out. If they fix it, any reputable repair shop can perform the work. But an electric vehicle? Even if they fix the body damage, how can they tell if the battery is damaged or not? If the insurance buys off and says the vehicle is fixed and good to go, then someone burns to death, imagine the lawsuits.

    I predict that, without govt interference, pretty soon no insurance company will cover electric cars. Period. Too much risk.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. My wife works in the Escrow Department of a small but very good bank. She used to work in the Insurance Department. The newer girls are always coming to her with issues they have. The number of automobile insurance companies that are considering refusing to cover EV's is rising every month. They are currently figuring out how to do it legally without having to move completely out of state.

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  2. The indoctrinated liberals with an agenda can say what they want. Listen to the actuaries.

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    Replies
    1. Yes sir. Actuaries are the 'gods' of the insurance world.

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  3. I lived in a three story apartment block and I was on the second floor. An old hippy had a tesla car that parked just below by living room window(assigned parking space) I bitched about it and it went nowhere with management. Just before I moved out he was at a store nearby and his tesla caught on fire in the parking lot, no known reason why... I had previously had submitted a letter to the company that owned the apartment holding them collectively and personally liable if that car caught on fire parked under my window. I walked into the managers office smug as hell after learning about the inferno. I had learned months before he stored one of those electric bikes in his apartment, the floor below me and one apartment over and I filed a complaint as we were not allowed to keep bikes bikes in our apartment and the local fire marshal was very interested and visited the complex and issued an order no electric bikes were allowed in multiple dwellings. I can tell you I wasn't very popular there with the other residents as this old hippie had a lot of friends there. I didn't care, rather be shunned than barbecued.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. BRAVO. Much better to be alive and able to fight than to be roasted because of some frickin' retard. You probably saved someone's life by forcing him to remove that ebike from the building.

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