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Rescue work ends following SW China colliery gas leak, 35 dead
GUIYANG—Rescuers on Sunday
recovered the bodies of the last two missing miners and ended their
operation at a colliery in southwest China’s Guizhou Province, where a
gas leak killed 35.
One body was retrieved at 2:30 a.m. and the other at 3:24 a.m., said
sources with the emergency rescue headquarters at Qunli Colliery in
Nayong County. Eighty-six miners were working in the shaft when the gas
leak occurred at 1:44 p.m. on Thursday. Fifty-two were rescued, but one
died after emergency treatment.
Management of the mine has agreed to pay 200,000 yuan (26,667 U.S.
dollars) in compensation for each victim. Qunli is a village-run
colliery with more than 100 employees. Its designed annual output is
300,000 tons.
The State Council will send an investigation team to look into the cause
of the accident. Zhao Tiechui, director of the State Administration of
Coal Mine Safety, has blamed the accident on management faults. “It
wouldn’t have happened had adequate precautionary measures been taken.”
Minutes of a meeting attended by mine managers last year indicated a gas
leak on Oct. 24, 2006. Management, seeing no casualties, downplayed the
accident by imposing fines from 200 to 500 yuan (26 to 66 dollars) on
three managers, and did not report to the local safety watchdog.
“If they did [report], the mine would have been forced to suspend
production for a safety overhaul, which could have lasted from two to
six months,” an investigator said on condition of anonymity. Neither the
mine owners nor the local government would willingly suspend production
because in the backwater agricultural county of Nayong, 70 percent of
the financial revenues come from the coal industry.
As winter heating drives up energy demand, coal prices in Guizhou
Province have increased by almost 30 percent. Coal output is expected to
exceed 100 million tons this year in Guizhou, a major supplier for
China’s ambitious west to east power transmission project, compared with
36 million tons in 2000.
Its power generating capacity has more than tripled from 5 million
kilowatts in 2000 to 18 million kilowatts in the first 10 months of this
year. At least 70 percent of the newly installed generators are fueled
by coal.—Xinhua |