AMSJ » Poor signage may have contributed to death at Grasstree Mine
LATEST NEWS

Poor signage may have contributed to death at Grasstree Mine

Preliminary investigations into the tragic death at Middlemount’s Grasstree Mine last week indicate that the worker entered a closed off area of the mine that was not properly signed as being off limits.

A Safety Alert issued by the Qld Department of Mines and Energy  yesterday states, “He had attempted to enter a part of the mine that was being inertised (when a sealed section is filled with inert gas to reduce the risk of gas explosions and fires). To do so, he opened a hatch that had been closed, but was not clearly marked as inaccessible.”

However investigations are still continuing into the incident and it will be some time before a full report is released.

On 6 May an electrician was found collapsed by co-workers in an underground section of the Anglo American-owned Grasstree Coal Mine near Middlemount in Central Queensland.

Co-workers tried to revive the employee before bringing him to the surface where they continued the resuscitation, without success.

No other personnel were injured in the incident.

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment