What’s required on a lithium battery test summary?
If you ship or transport lithium batteries, you are most likely aware the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR) now require manufacturers and distributors to make a lithium battery test summary available for any lithium cell or battery manufactured on or after January 1, 2008. That is great news, but what information is on a lithium battery test summary?
Required information
A lithium battery test summary provides critical safety information about the battery. The test summary must include the following elements:
- Name of cell, battery, or product manufacturer, as applicable;
- Cell, battery, or product manufacturer’s contact information to include address, phone number, email address, and website for more information;
- Name of test laboratory to include address, phone number, email address and website for more information;
- A unique test report identification number;
- Date of test report;
- Description of cell or battery to include at a minimum:
- Lithium ion or lithium metal cell or battery,
- Mass,
- Watt-hour rating or lithium content,
- Physical description of the cell/battery, and
- Model numbers;
- List of tests conducted and results (i.e., pass/fail);
- Reference to the assembled battery or testing requirements, if applicable;
- Reference to the revised edition of the UN Manual of Tests and Criteria used and to amendments thereto, if any; and
- Signature with name and title of signatory as an indication of the validity of information provided.
Even though the test summary is required to have the information listed above, the HMR does not require any specific form or format this information needs to be in. Also, the test summaries don’t need to be approved or validated by any agency. However, the information provided in the summaries must be correct. This gives battery manufacturers the flexibility to develop their own test summaries as needed.
Test summaries do not need to accompany lithium battery shipments, they just need to be made available. Manufacturers and distributors may make the test summary available by posting it on a company website or by preparing a paper document.
Providing a lithium battery testing summary will help lithium battery shippers have confidence that the batteries they offer for transport have been manufactured and tested according to regulatory requirements.
Key to remember: Lithium battery manufacturers and distributors must make a test summary available to down-line suppliers. While the test summary is required to have specific information, there is not required format that it needs to be displayed in.