Burning coal a new setback at NZ mine
COAL inside a New Zealand mine where the bodies of 29 victims of one of the country's worst industrial disasters remain has caught fire and could burn for weeks, a senior official said yesterday.
The fire is the latest setback to family members and rescuers waiting to retrieve the bodies from the Pike River coal mine on South Island.
The mine was rocked by an explosion on November 19, trapping the 29 men. A second major explosion five days later dashed hopes any of the workers had survived.
There have since been two more explosions - with one on Sunday shooting flames into the air and blowing a giant extractor fan from the top of the main ventilation shaft.
Pike River mine Chief Executive Peter Whittall said yesterday that flames were leaping out of the ventilation shaft. He said loose coal was definitely burning and possibly the coal seam near the bottom of the pit.
"Seeing the smoke and getting the gases we're getting is just indicative of coal being on fire, so I don't doubt with the large explosions we've had, that a lot of roof coal would be dislodged so there would be loose coal burning."
Recovery crews hope to start a jet engine later to blow inert gases and water vapor into the blazing mine to kill the fire and clear out the explosive gases. It could take weeks to complete the task.
Prime Minister John Key announced on Monday that a Royal Commission of Inquiry will investigate the disaster and an international mine safety expert will carry out an urgent safety audit of New Zealand's four other underground coal mines.
A national memorial service for the lost workers is to be held tomorrow in the nearby town of Greymouth.
New Zealand's mining industry is small and generally considered safe. The tragedy deeply shocked the country and devastated families who - buoyed by the survival tale of Chile's 33 buried miners - had clung to hope that their relatives could emerge alive.
The country has had 210 deaths in 114 years in mines. New Zealand's worst mine disaster was in 1896, when 65 died in a gas explosion at a mine on the same coal seam.
The fire is the latest setback to family members and rescuers waiting to retrieve the bodies from the Pike River coal mine on South Island.
The mine was rocked by an explosion on November 19, trapping the 29 men. A second major explosion five days later dashed hopes any of the workers had survived.
There have since been two more explosions - with one on Sunday shooting flames into the air and blowing a giant extractor fan from the top of the main ventilation shaft.
Pike River mine Chief Executive Peter Whittall said yesterday that flames were leaping out of the ventilation shaft. He said loose coal was definitely burning and possibly the coal seam near the bottom of the pit.
"Seeing the smoke and getting the gases we're getting is just indicative of coal being on fire, so I don't doubt with the large explosions we've had, that a lot of roof coal would be dislodged so there would be loose coal burning."
Recovery crews hope to start a jet engine later to blow inert gases and water vapor into the blazing mine to kill the fire and clear out the explosive gases. It could take weeks to complete the task.
Prime Minister John Key announced on Monday that a Royal Commission of Inquiry will investigate the disaster and an international mine safety expert will carry out an urgent safety audit of New Zealand's four other underground coal mines.
A national memorial service for the lost workers is to be held tomorrow in the nearby town of Greymouth.
New Zealand's mining industry is small and generally considered safe. The tragedy deeply shocked the country and devastated families who - buoyed by the survival tale of Chile's 33 buried miners - had clung to hope that their relatives could emerge alive.
The country has had 210 deaths in 114 years in mines. New Zealand's worst mine disaster was in 1896, when 65 died in a gas explosion at a mine on the same coal seam.
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