Massive Lithium Ion Battery Fire Raises Questions About California’s Energy Future
- PAUL PRESTONxd
- Mar 17
- 1 min read

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March 14, 2025Updated:March 15, 2025
MOSS LANDING, Calif.—Around dusk on Jan. 16, Brad Beach was checking on his small herd of Texas Longhorn cattle—a majestic bull named Tex, two cows and three calves, grazing about two miles inland from California’s central coastline.
Beach saw smoke blowing from the coast, where two towers mark the distinctive silhouette of an energy plant. Shortly after leaving the herd, he noticed a massive fire had broken out at the plant and came back to get his cattle, only to be turned away by the California Highway Patrol, which had the area on lockdown as residents were evacuated.
“I showed up the following day,” Beach told The Epoch Times. “There was nothing that was going to stop me.”
By then, he recalled, the cattle were heavily distressed. “They’re saying, ‘Dad, save us.’”
The animals continued to exhibit distressed behavior. Three weeks later, one gave birth to a stillborn calf.
“She was actually very strong, the strongest of the herd—genetic-wise and all around. This would have been her third [calf],” Beach told The Epoch Times at his ranch in Chular, California, on Feb. 17.

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