Methane gas explosion killed 31 in disused South African mine

23 June 2023 - 14:31 By Carien Du Plessis, Felix Njini and Marafaele Mohloboli
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Methane is a highly explosive greenhouse gas often found in underground mines and poses serious safety and health threats to mine workers.
Methane is a highly explosive greenhouse gas often found in underground mines and poses serious safety and health threats to mine workers.
Image: 123RF/ adam88x/ File photo

A methane gas explosion in a disused South African mine killed at least 31 people last month believed to be from Lesotho, South Africa's energy department said on Friday.

The department of mineral resources and energy (DMRE) had said late on Thursday that South Africa was investigating the deaths, which occurred in a ventilation shaft in the shuttered Virginia mine in Free State.

Lesotho's foreign ministry had reported the incident to Pretoria, it said.

The DMRE said an investigation into the incident with the help of Harmony Gold — the previous owner of the mine which ceased operations in the 1990s — determined that methane levels were very high in the ventilation shaft and an explosion had occurred.

“As such, it is currently too risky to dispatch a search team to the shaft. However, we are considering various options to speedily deal with the situation,” it said.

A spokesperson for mining and energy minister Gwede Mantashe said it might take a while to retrieve the bodies as authorities did not want to risk losing more lives.

Harmony said it viewed the incident — which occurred in the third week of May — as a criminal matter and has handed it over to the police.

“We were informed by one of the illegal miners (who survived) that there had been an explosion and that the incident resulted in loss of life,” said Jared Coetzer, Harmony's head of investor relations.

Coetzer said the shaft was acquired in the mid-1980s but was closed shortly afterwards due to a methane gas explosion and was never used by the miner.

“We don't know how the people got to the place where the explosion occurred,” he added.

Methane is a highly explosive greenhouse gas often found in underground mines and poses serious safety and health threats to mine workers.

Talks were ongoing between South Africa and Lesotho to retrieve the bodies and bring them home, said Thapelo Mabote, a spokesperson for Lesotho's prime minister.

A chief in the Berea district, from which most of the dead men hail, spoke on behalf of the bereaved families and said he had lost six of his men and was waiting for details.

“We don't want anything more than just to have those bodies retrieved and repatriated, that's all we are asking for,” said Makhabane Peete. 

Reuters


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