By
Candace Lombardi
Wednesday, October 04 2006 11:18 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,61956967,00.htm
Sony is planning to announce a massive battery recall of its own, the
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) confirmed.
The recall, expected this month, will encompass all possibly defective
batteries, including those previously announced by manufacturers for specific
notebook computers, said Julie Vallese, director of the Office of Public Affairs
at the CPSC. But it is not expected to extend to batteries for devices other
than laptops.
Sony makes lithium ion batteries for an array of electronics devices,
including camcorders, portable DVD players and video game consoles. Contrary to
a blog of Consumer Reports, which first reported the potential
recall, though, only notebook batteries are currently covered, according to the
CPSC and Sony, which would jointly conduct the recall.
"Sony has provided a wealth of technical data to the CPSC involving this
tech, and it is omnipresent in a host of portable electronic devices, but as far
as we know, from Sony's perspective, there is no initiative planned at this time
that goes beyond what has already been communicated with respect to notebook
computers," said Sony spokesman Rick Clancy, referring to Sony's official statement released last week concerning a
global replacement program for notebook battery packs.
The CPSC is trying to contact Consumer Reports for a correction about a
recall extension to other electronics devices, Vallese said.
"I think that the real way to look at it is that Sony is working with the
CPSC to identify the widest scope of batteries that it may recall. Any recall
that the agency will make will be limited to batteries that power notebook
computers. We have no anticipation at this time beyond that," Vallese said.
"Sony and the CPSC are currently working together to identify what will be in
the recall, the time frame of what was manufactured and sold. We will be trying
to issue that as soon as possible," she said.
Richard Shim, a senior analyst with IDC, said: "The big issue is that while
there is a small financial impact [to Sony as a company] compared to the
perception impact, you have a number of significant brands that the consumer
knows very well who were also involved in the recalls. They have basically
pointed the problem at Sony by saying they have a poorly manufactured component.
"From a manufacturer standpoint, this gives them a lot of leverage going
forward. Sony is going to have to rebuild not just with consumers, but with
manufacturers. And the fact of the matter is that a lot of these manufacturers"
buy batteries from multiple manufacturers, Shim said.
Previous notebook
battery recalls were issued by Dell and Apple Computer in August for
specific laptop models containing Sony batteries, after it was discovered that
some batteries were overheating or exploding, causing fires even when the
machines were turned off. At the time, Sony said the issue was confined to Dell
and Apple computers, and the problem was attributed to a potential short circuit
caused by tiny shards of metal left over in the battery cells from the
manufacturing process.
On Monday, Toshiba announced that it, too, would be recalling 830,000 laptop
computer batteries, while Dell increased the amount of laptop battery recalls
from 4.1 million to 4.2 million. Lenovo
announced a recall of 526,000 laptop batteries last week, after a
Lenovo ThinkPad T43 caught fire at the Los Angeles International Airport.
Separately on Tuesday, Sony and Hewlett-Packard issued a joint statement that said a
study of the issue found that "because of HP's PC system configuration, HP
notebooks using Sony battery cells are not prone to overheating issues that have
recently been observed."
The issue has specifically affected travel, as some airlines have issued restrictions on
the use of Dell and Apple laptops on planes. While the laptops may be
brought on board, owners must first remove the battery and then use them only
with an external power supply.
This may be creating negative feelings among consumers, said Shim, as most
airlines do not offer electrical outlets in coach class, making notebooks
essentially unusable on planes. Sony needs to have high take-back rates--the
number of bad batteries returned for good ones--so the airlines can lift the
current bans, Shim said.
"If you can't use your notebook on the planes, that puts a pretty big cramp
in [your] day," Shim said. The airlines "have to do what they are doing from a
liability standpoint. You don't want to see that evening headline that a plane
caught fire because someone's laptop battery overheated. That's a lose-lose for
everybody," he said.
Vallese said consumers should keep the situation in perspective. According to
the Portable Rechargeable Battery Association, an estimated 2
billion lithium ion cells will be manufactured in 2006. Of those, Vallese said,
the actual number of incidents of fire in relation to batteries is few.
"We want consumers to respond because the risk is real, but the risk is low,
and that needs to be understood," Vallese said.