Gotion Illinois:
Key Questions and Answers
Gotion Illinois is a state-of-the-art facility dedicated to the manufacturing and integration of advanced Energy Storage Systems (ESS). It delivers a comprehensive range of ESS solutions from large-scale utility systems to commercial and residential applications to electric vehicle batteries, designed to meet the growing demand for reliable and sustainable energy storage.
The plant is being developed in two phases. Phase 1 is now operational, with workers hired and production underway assembling the different battery storage products. In Phase 2, the facility will expand to lithium iron phosphate (LFP) battery manufacturing, positioning Illinois as a key hub in the U.S. battery supply chain.
Lithium iron phosphate batteries (LiFePO4), or commonly known as LFP.
LFP batteries do not contain lithium metal, which means their chemistry does not present the type of lithium-water reaction associated with other battery types.
LFP batteries are considered more stable than the other types of chemistry batteries, which means they are less likely to react to external stimulants
As a result, LFP chemistry is much more resistant to thermal runaway, has a substantially higher ignition temperature than NCM (Nickel Cobalt Manganese), and has better tolerance to overcharging, puncture, and high temperatures. These characteristics create a lower fire risk, meaning safer large packs for large-scale energy storage and manufacturing.
At our facility, there have been no incidents of batteries catching fire. The documented cases of LFP batteries catching fire are very few compared to other types of batteries (chemistries).
Industry data also consistently shows that LFP chemistries are significantly less prone to thermal runaway and severe fire events than NMC/NCA chemistries. Technical data consistently shows that LFP batteries have a higher thermal runaway onset temperature (often ~270°C) compared with NMC (~150–200°C), making spontaneous ignition far less likely under stress. LFP’s batteries' iron-phosphate cathode doesn’t release oxygen as easily under stress, which reduces the fuel available for a fire relative to nickel-rich chemistries.
Fire departments routinely use water on LFP battery events.
The water will act as a cooling agent, and it prevents the spread of the thermal runaway.
Water is the best and preferred extinguishing agent. Water cools the cells below thermal-runaway temperature, prevents heat from propagating to adjacent cells, and suppresses re-ignition, which is the biggest risk.
⚠️ Myth to ignore: “Never use water on lithium batteries” - This is false. Fire departments worldwide use water on LFP batteries.
In the unlikely event of loss to municipal water to the facility, the tanks each have a stand-alone capacity of 625,000 gallons, which is the designed equivalent of every sprinkler head in our facility running for 21 minutes before depleting.
In June 2021, a large fire broke out at a warehouse in Morris, Illinois, that was being used to store large quantities of “old batteries.” The facility was not authorized, and local authorities were not informed of the nature and specifics of the battery storage. It was unregulated and not equipped, and as a result not compliant with appropriate fire safety protocols. The facility had unaddressed maintenance and safety deficiencies that contributed to the incident.
Because first responders were initially unaware that some lithium-ion batteries were involved and which types (NCM, LFP, or other chemistries), early firefighting tactics exacerbated the fire, complicating suppression efforts.
By contrast, Gotion Illinois uses a newer and much safer version of lithium-ion battery chemistry (LFP) and has installed extensive safety and fire suppressant systems and equipment throughout the facility. Gotion Illinois also works closely with local officials to ensure appropriate permitting, transparency, and adherence to established fire and safety protocols and has met emergency-response best practices. In key areas, Gotion Illinois has risen above the requirements, such as establishing an internal fire brigade, staffed and led by certified firefigthers and EMT professionals.
The Gotion Illinois facility is compliant with all codes relating to operating the facility under the 2024 International Fire Code (IFC) and International Building Code (IBC). In addition, Gotion Illinois is compliant with all EPA and other regulatory requirements of operating the facility.
Gotion Illinois is required to, has met all local, state, and federal regulatory requirements and has gone over and above the highest regulatory and safety standards in BESS and E/V battery manufacturing. The product chemistry itself is widely considered the most safety-conscious product on the market.
Regular monthly meetings with all stakeholders (Village, Fire, code) ensure current cooperation, and ongoing communication provides the basis for safety and compliance to all required codes and protocols.
Furthermore, it is Gotion Illinois’ ongoing responsibility to communicate with the local community, respond to questions regarding factory and community safety, and be a good steward of our local environment and resources.
The water holding tanks are the backup water supply for the sprinkler system incase there is an interruption of water supply from the main water line.
