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  • EU Safety Gate Publishes Additional Notifications Involving Power Banks

    In February 2026, the EU Safety Gate system issued additional notifications involving portable power banks in the European market, citing potential electrical and thermal safety non-compliance identified through routine market surveillance.

  • EU Safety Gate Publishes New Recall Notifications Involving Portable Chargers

    In February 2026, the EU Safety Gate system issued additional notifications involving portable power banks in the European market, citing potential electrical and thermal safety non-compliance identified through routine market surveillance.

  • WPC Announces Update to Qi2 Certification Process

    In February 2026, the Wireless Power Consortium announced updates to the Qi2 certification process, refining alignment testing, sustained power verification, and thermal management checks to enhance interoperability and consistency across wireless charging products.

  • EU Publishes Updated Guidance on Battery Sustainability and Labeling Requirements

    In March 2026, the European Commission released updated guidance on battery sustainability and labeling requirements, clarifying expectations for product identification, traceability, and consistent labeling practices across the EU battery regulatory framework.

  • EU Releases New Battery Passport Implementation Guidelines

    The European Commission released updated guidance in March 2026 for implementing the EU Battery Passport under Regulation (EU) 2023/1542. The system aims to improve battery traceability, lifecycle transparency, and sustainability data across the EU battery supply chain.

  • IATA Updates Lithium Battery Transport Guidance for Airlines

    In March 2026, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) released updated guidance on lithium battery air transport. The update emphasizes packaging safety, staff training, and maintaining lithium-ion batteries at a state of charge of 30% or lower to reduce transportation risks.

  • EU Battery Regulation Moves Into Implementation Phase Across Member States

    In March 2026, the European Commission confirmed that the EU Battery Regulation (EU 2023/1542) is moving into its implementation phase across member states. The regulation introduces new requirements for battery labeling, recycling, and supply chain transparency, affecting portable batteries used in smartphones, power banks, and consumer electronics.

  • IEC Updates Portable Battery Safety Testing Standards

    In March 2026, the IEC updated safety testing standards for portable rechargeable batteries, refining test methods, protection circuit verification, and certification alignment. The changes are relevant to smartphones, power banks, wireless accessories, and other portable electronics that rely on lithium battery safety compliance.

  • EU Advances Carbon Footprint Methodology for Batteries Placed on the EU Market

    The EU is moving toward more standardized carbon footprint reporting for batteries placed on the European market. The methodology supported by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre helps create a more consistent way to measure battery-related emissions, which may affect lifecycle analysis, supplier traceability, and future compliance preparation under the EU battery regulatory framework.

  • IATA Issues 67th Edition Addendum for Dangerous Goods Regulations Affecting Battery Shipments

    On 1 January 2026, IATA issued Addendum 1 to the 67th Edition of the Dangerous Goods Regulations, reinforcing updated battery air cargo compliance requirements. The addendum matters because lithium battery shipments must follow the latest rule language on packing instructions, documentation, UN 38.3 testing, and the expanded 30% state-of-charge restrictions affecting certain batteries packed with equipment.

  • USB-IF Releases Updated USB Power Delivery Compliance Test Specification

    In March 2026, USB-IF released an updated USB Power Delivery Compliance Test Specification for chargers, cables, controllers, and end devices. The update strengthens the testing basis for protocol validation, interoperability, and certification readiness across the USB-C fast-charging ecosystem.

  • IATA Introduces New Passenger Recommendations on Power Bank Use and Charging in the Cabin

    IATA’s 2026 dangerous goods update cycle places stronger emphasis on how passengers carry and use power banks in the cabin. Power banks remain classified as spare lithium batteries and must stay in cabin baggage, while updated guidance also highlights in-flight charging behavior, device accessibility, and airline-level safety controls related to lithium battery risks.

  • IATA Revises Passenger Guidance for Lithium Batteries, Including Power Banks

    IATA’s revised passenger guidance confirms that power banks are treated as spare lithium batteries, not ordinary electronics. They must be carried in cabin baggage, remain subject to watt-hour limits and possible airline approval rules, and require more careful handling because aviation safety policies distinguish spare batteries from batteries installed in equipment.