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Fire accident at an underground coal mine

fire incident at underground coal mine

The NSW Resources Regulator has reported a fire accident that occurred on a compressor at an underground coal mine. Two workers suffered nausea and headaches after taking about 30 minutes to extinguish a fire on a compressor. The compressor was on the mine surface, however, the workforce was withdrawn from underground as a precaution. Repairs had recently been completed to the compressor and it was deemed fit to continue in operation.

The Regulator said: “The cause of the fire is unknown. Further information may be published at a later date, following examination of the compressor.”

Read more Mining Safety News

Queensland Mineral Mines & Quarries Inspectorate has released a safety alert regarding a fire incident that occurred on an RC drill rig from the compressed air system.

On 3rd February 2021, a serious accident occurred while a worker was making adjustments to the compressed air delivery system on a UDR 1000 RC drill rig. The drill rig was engulfed in a fire causing serious burns to the workers face, arm, chest and back. Fortunately, the worker’s eyes were protected from the fire by safety glasses.

While the investigation is still ongoing, the findings of the investigation to date indicate that:

  • The screw compressor air receiver was over-pressurised, causing a pressure relief valve to operate and detaching the fluid return hose on the wet side of the air receiver/sump.
  • The fluid return hose fitting was located between the air receiver and the compressor engine, in close proximity to hot engine components.
  • the release of compressed air and oil from the air receiver created a flammable atmosphere which was ignited by the hot engine exhaust.

The inspector states the key issues:

  • OEM operation and servicing manuals were not used or available on site.
  • Plant was operated in way that created an unacceptable level of risk.
  • Plant controls did not bring the plant to a safe state when the plant was operated outside of its design parameters.
  • Instrumentation did not enable adequate monitoring of the plant’s operation and condition.

The inspector recommended that the Site Senior Executive must ensure that:

  • high pressure air systems for drill rigs are inspected, operated and maintained by competent persons in accordance with OEM recommendations;
  • high pressure air system monitoring and protection devices, including temperature and pressure sensors and gauges, are verified for correct operation and adequately maintained; and
  • compressed air receiver fittings and hoses are maintained to withstand foreseeable system over-pressure events. 

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