Key Takeaways
- BYD’s Pingshan location in Shenzhen experienced a fire starting at 2:48 a.m. Tuesday
- The blaze occurred in a multi-story parking facility housing test and decommissioned vehicles
- Emergency responders contained the fire with zero injuries or fatalities
- Shares of BYD declined 0.6% in response to the incident
- Authorities have yet to determine what sparked the blaze
BYD’s industrial complex in the Pingshan district of Shenzhen, China, became the site of an early morning fire on Tuesday. The automaker and local emergency services both confirmed the incident.
The company released a statement indicating the blaze originated within a multi-level parking structure designated for storing test vehicles and decommissioned units. BYD confirmed that emergency teams successfully put out the flames and that the incident resulted in zero casualties.
Fire departments received the initial alert at 2:48 a.m. in the Ma Luan subdistrict within Pingshan. Response crews from both district and city-level agencies arrived promptly at the scene.
Footage shared across Chinese social platforms captured dense black smoke billowing from the multi-floor structure. The videos displayed flames spreading along an extended portion of the building, while emergency vehicles and law enforcement personnel gathered at the location.
Reuters authenticated the video content, confirming the magnitude of the fire during active burning.
The Pingshan district serves as the location for BYD’s worldwide headquarters, placing the fire in close proximity to the company’s main operations center.
Market Response
BYD stock experienced a 0.6% decline at 0208 GMT after details of the fire became public. The relatively minor decrease appeared to correlate with the absence of casualties and the successful containment efforts.
The parking facility affected by the blaze housed vehicles designated for testing and disposal rather than finished products awaiting delivery or active manufacturing inventory.
Unique Challenges with Electric Vehicle Fires
Specialists have observed distinct characteristics in fires involving electric vehicles compared to traditional gasoline-powered automobiles. These incidents typically extend over longer periods and present greater challenges for suppression teams, partially because battery components can reignite after initial extinguishment.
Authorities have yet to confirm whether the stored vehicles included electric models or conventional combustion-engine units utilized in testing protocols.
Both local fire departments and BYD have refrained from announcing the fire’s origin at this time.
The company has released no information regarding potential damage to equipment, prototype vehicles, or research materials in the affected area.
BYD representatives have given no indication that manufacturing schedules or operational activities at the Pingshan site face any interruption.
The automaker declined to specify the total number of vehicles housed within the parking structure when the fire began.
Emergency officials verified complete extinguishment of the blaze, with medical teams reporting zero injuries from the incident.

