|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
What price increased productivity?
Four miners killed in Australian mine disaster
By Terry Cook
2 December 1999
Use
this version to print
The accident that claimed the lives of four mine workers on
November 24 at the Northparkes copper and gold mine near Parkes,
in central west New South Wales, again focuses attention on the
issue of safety standards in the mining industry.
The four men, Ross Bodkin 41, Michael House 33, Stuart Osmond
47 and Colin Lloyd-Jones 41, were killed instantly when millions
of tonnes of ore and earth collapsed suddenly causing a catastrophic
air blast through an access tunnel in which they were working
140 metres below ground.
The collapse extended hundreds of metres right up to ground
level. The resulting wind blast was so powerful that it ripped
apart the two-tonne Toyota Land Cruiser carrying two of the men
and spread shattered metal and wreckage over a kilometre along
the mine shaft. The police believe that the injuries will be so
severe that they will have to rely on dental charts and other
personal data to confirm the identity of the dead. The initial
identification was made on the basis of the four work tags that
remained on the board after other workers were brought to the
surface.
One of the mine's engineers said: "Normally not much ore
falls down. This time it appears a huge amount fell. There would
have been a massive blast of air and even if the miners had been
some distance away, there would have been nowhere for the air
to escape. It was like being trapped in a piston.
The incident could easily have resulted in a greater loss of
life. Another 57 men were carrying out maintenance work on mining
and crushing equipment in the control room some 300 metres below
the access shaft. The blast caused the ground to shake around
them. They were forced to remain underground for over three hours
while rescue teams sought to determine whether it was safe for
them to exit.
Malcolm Bloomfield, the managing director of North Limited,
the mine's owner, stated that the deaths had been caused by an
irregularity in the mining method currently in use
at the mine. Northparkes is the only underground mine in Australia
using a method of ore extraction known as block caving.
The technique consists of creating a void in the ground under
a core of ore. Miners precipitate a movement in the ore body through
gypsum cracks producing what is known as a "controlled collapse".
The conglomerate above then falls into the void where the ore
is recovered through points at the base that are serviced by protected
access tunnels.
When a controlled collapse" is in progress there
is normally a crew of about six men and the process is done largely
by remote control. The team is located in the protected control
room.
A company spokesman confirmed that the accident took place
during a maintenance shutdown and that there was no mining taking
place at the time. He said that the company had no explanation
for the unexpected collapse, saying, "on this occasion the
body of ore decided to move itself. He claimed that there
had been no prior indications. The matter is now the subject of
several investigations.
The inability of the company to explain why an unscheduled
collapse occurred and why it had taken them by surprise puts a
question mark over the whole procedure. It also challenges the
management's claims that block caving is a safer method of mining
than most because only a small number of people are underground
when the mining is in progress.
The central attraction of block mining is not its safety features.
Northparkes management admits that it adopted the method because
it is a cheap means of extracting large quantities of the low-grade
ore. When the mine first opened the management claimed that the
operation had the potential for becoming the lowest cost
underground hard rock operation in the country.
This prediction has been borne out. In the first six months
of operations this year, the mine has already exceeded its projected
full year's profit. While the mine only employs 200 men, its ore
mining and processing capacity stands at five million tonnes per
annum.
Any mining method involving controlled collapses
contains inherent dangers and as the incident at Northparkes demonstrates
it can produce unpredictable results.
Although not the same as block caving, controlled collapses
in the coal mining industry have already resulted in incidents
that could have ended in the loss of life. One such method, in
which a mechanical miner moves forward allowing the roof to collapse
behind it, is currently in use at the underground Moonee Colliery
at Catherine Hill Bay, just south of Newcastle.
In early 1998, 19 miners were injured in an air blast at Moonee
when the roof was allowed to collapse. In April the following
year, another miner Steven Chandler suffered serious injuries
when a collapsing roof caused a massive blast of air to surge
through the shaft where he was working. The mine's manager Ross
Campbell defended the company's decision to continue with the
method because it made the operation viable, that
is profitable.
Despite numerous official inquiries into the safety conditions
in NSW mines and a mountain of recommendations, the death toll
continues to mount. Last week's tragedy at Northparkes brings
the total number of fatalities in NSW mines since March 1995 to
28an average of seven deaths every year. Northparkes is
the most serious accident since four miners were killed in the
Gretley Colliery, near Newcastle in November 1996.
Only last year the Labor government claimed to have implemented
most of the 44 recommendations handed down from the inquiry into
mine safety initiated in 1996 to quell growing anger in mining
communities. The recently completed judicial inquiry into the
Gretley deaths produced another 43 recommendations and last month
the government announced it was now planning prosecutions.
But the official inquiries will not bring about a progressive
change in the grave situation facing miners because they are designed
to mystify the underlying causes that have produced it. Over the
past years, driven by increasingly ruthless international competition,
the mining companies have demanded the removal of any impediment
to increased productivity. In the resulting hot house
atmosphere in the mines, greater production has increasingly taken
precedence over safety.
Despite the evidence to the contrary, the mining unions have
hailed the outcome of each inquiry as a step towards greater safety
in the mines. The unions are deeply implicated as they have collaborated
for over a decade in the drive for international competitiveness.
The destruction of thousands of jobs, the reduction of manning
levels, and longer working hours and shifts have all contributed
to the undermining of safety standards.
See Also:
Australia: Two accidents highlight
worsening coal mine safety
[22 July 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |