Emergency? Call 999

For general enquiries

Contact Us

Latest Incidents

9th June, 2026 - 16:18: This afternoon Salisbury crew attended a chimney fire reported at a pr...Read more

5th June, 2026 - 20:56: Our crew from Swindon attended a call to a small fire which had been l...Read more

4th June, 2026 - 19:05: This evening we received four calls to a vehicle fire on Bleke Street ...Read more

4th June, 2026 - 04:56 PM: Sherborne crews attended a Vehicle fire on hospital lane in Sherborne....Read more

4th June, 2026 - 3:36pm: Bournemouth - Two crews from Springbourne and Poole fire station were ...Read more

4th June, 2026 - 14:16 PM: Crews attended Hopton industrial estate after alarms sounded and smoke...Read more

4th June, 2026 - 09:28 AM: Crews attended an incident involving a washing machine which had caugh...Read more

3rd June, 2026 - 6.33pm: Sutton Benger - Crews from Chippenham and Corsham were mobilised to th...Read more

3rd June, 2026 - 13:21: Crews from Redhill and Springbourne attended a fire at a property on R...Read more

3rd June, 2026 - 11:06: A crew from Salisbury attended Archers Court for a residential alarm. ...Read more

Safety reminder for e-bike owners


Date: 23rd April, 2024

Dorset & Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service is reminding people to take care when charging lithium-ion batteries.

The Service was called to two incidents over the weekend involving e-bike batteries; one fire was extinguished by the owner before firefighters arrived on scene, but the other caused significant damage to a house.

Station Manager Dave Geddes said: “There is always a risk that lithium-ion batteries can fail catastrophically, ‘explode’ and/or lead to a rapidly developing fire. We would therefore always urge anyone with an e-bike or e-scooter to take every precaution to ensure that is charged as safely as possible. Always follow the manufacturer’s instructions, unplug the charger as soon as it’s finished, and only ever use the correct charger.”

Other top tips include:

Full safety advice can be found at www.dwfire.org.uk/e-bikes-and-e-scooters

Smaller lithium-ion batteries can also be found in devices such as mobile phones, tablets and e-cigarettes. These also carry a fire risk, and further safety advice can be found at www.dwfire.org.uk/batteries

results found.

Name:
Post Holders:
Grade: