If we were using LFP batteries there would be no fires. It is virtually impossible to get them to start a fire even when they are horribly abused.
They are not prone to thermal runaway as are other lithium batteries which depend on cathode materials like Manganese Oxides and cobalt oxides. These can be very fire prone if abused, or have even just become old.
Electrolytes in all these batteries are flammable, but Iron phosphate cathodes don't go into thermal run away when they get hot, and set fire to the cell, and they don't generate their own oxygen like cathode materials based on cobalt and manganese oxides, making fires hard to put out.
LFE batteries are being adopted in EV cars and other vehicles. Tesla are using them now in the majority of their vehicles and BYD entirely. BYD make more electric cars than any other manufacturer in the world.
The energy density of LFP is lower, than cobalt and manganese chemistry, but the advantages of those is decreasing.
Quite apart from safety, LiFePo4 (LFP) has a much longer working life with expected cycle count into thousands of charges as against a few hundred cycles for the batteries we e-bikers use now.
Quite a lot of the poor reputation of LFP on this site, is based on cells made a long time ago when batteries generally were not made like they are now. The complaints about them swelling up indicate the symptoms of LFP being over charged or having been worked too hard.
I'm going to suggest that in five years time, iron phosphate batteries will dominate both the car market and the e-bike one too, just as they already dominate the energy storage market.