they may have an idea but wouldn't say.
I just looked at a bit of data and established that there are approximately 40 times as many ICE cars on the road as EVs. It's only since 2020 that EV sales started to pickup and the average age of all ICE cars on the road is approximately 10 years old, so there are as many ICE cars sold before 2015 as there have been since, and still on the road.
When they say that incidents of ICE vehicles catching fire is 5 times the chance of an EV, and taking into consideration how many of each are on the road, that would mean if you're sitting in an EV, the chance of a fire would be 8 times more likely than if you were sitting an any random ICE car, who's age is 78.2% likely to be in the range 12.5 years to 7.5 years.
Additional to that, you have to consider how well the cars are looked after. 20 year old cars could be full of bodges done by various owners over the years, when they installed various electrical accessories, chipped their ECUs, fitted non-standard exhausts and did various other "go faster" modifications. EVs would generally be left alone, partly because they're newer (about 2 years old average), and partly because they're more likely to be only dealer serviced, as the majority are/were on leases.
I'm no expert, but I would assume that the average 10 year old ICE car would be more likely to catch fire than a 2 year old one. We can only guess at the difference. What would you say - twice as much? If you went with twice as much, that would mean 16 times as much chance of a fire from any random EV compared with any random ICE car of the same age.
We all know that the internal resistance of battery cells increases as they wear out. Does that mean that EV batteries would run hotter as they age, or can all cooling systems cope with that? In other words are fires more likely in old EVs compared with modern ones and how will that change in the future?
To be honest, I don't care about any of that because the overall risk is low. I do, however have one major concern, which is increasing every day. When EVs catch fire, the flames flare out and set fire to anything around them. When we get to the day that every car in the carpark is an EV and one catches fire, surely, the whole carpark will go up in flames. This is what's happened on cargo boats transporting EVs and road transporters. You can probably include to an extent Luton Airport too. At the moment, if an EV goes off, it might set light to the ICE cars around it, but that's as far as it would go. If you look at what happens in battery storage for powerplants, when one module goes off, it sets lights to all the ones around it, and the fire becomes unstoppable. Now, they're building them with space and walls around each module to stop the fire from spreading. Would they have to do the same in a car park, like walls and space between the bays? That would be a massive problem because there's hardly enough parking space already. It could, of course, be solved if there would be a lot fewer cars requiring parking space.