BHP Billiton’s open cut Goonyella Riverside coal mine (Photo: BHP Billiton)

October 12, 2016

A union has issued a warning to coal mining communities after confirmation of Australia’s first case of Black Lung disease in an open cut coal mine worker.

Miner Paul Head, from BHP Billiton’s Goonyella Riverside Mine in the Bowen Basin, has worked in the industry for 31 years, but never underground.

CFMEU Mining and Energy Division Queensland District president Stephen Smyth said workers and communities in all States and Territories with underground and open-cut coal mines were now “clearly at risk”.

“It’s a myth that miners working in open cut mines are not exposed to high levels of coal dust or at risk of developing irreversible and fatal Black Lung and other dust-related diseases,” Mr Smyth said.

“So far, industry and governments have been assuming this problem is isolated to underground mines; we now know this is a false assumption.

“The union is again urging mining companies to immediately address dust levels in all coalmines and keep dust levels below legal limits.”

The emergence of a confirmed case of Black Lung in an Australian open cut mine follows a 2012 study of surface coal miners in the US found that revealed 1-in-50 workers in surface coalmines had developed coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, or Black Lung.

Mr Smyth said that due to the similarities between the United States and Australian mining, it was estimated this figure would be comparable in Australia, if not higher.

“The current legal dust exposure limits in Queensland are insufficient and are also not being appropriately monitored to prevent excess dust exposure,” Mr Smyth said.

“Mining companies in Queensland have allowed dust levels in the mines to spike often well above these legal limits with no regard for the health of the miners.

“These operations must immediately start using more effective dust monitoring and control methods to reduce this deadly health risk and at the very least to comply with legal permissible levels.

“This should put all governments on notice – Black Lung disease is not just a threat to coal miners working in underground mines in Queensland, but to miners at all coal mines across Australia.

“This also underlines the importance of an industry levy to support a victims’ fund given the national significance of the issue.”


 

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