occupational health

Safety is not a line on a graph: mining must design it in from the start or risk repeating old mistakes in the critical minerals rush

Mining loves a neat correlation – tonnes per shift, dollars per ounce, emissions per unit, but as Peter Burton pointed out at AusIMM’s Critical Minerals 2025 in Perth, one thing that refuses to fit a tidy graph is safety performance.

Truck rollover, windblast and conveyor fire underline mine safety risks

A series of recent mine safety incidents in New South Wales and Queensland has reinforced ongoing concerns about worker safety in both underground and surface coal operations.

Inspectors warn of repeat safety failures in Queensland coal mines as fatigue dust and fires persist

Queensland’s Coal Mines Inspectorate has warned that coal mining operations are continuing to report repeat safety incidents, with fatigue, dust exposure, fires on mobile equipment, and falls from plant access systems among the most common issues identified in its September 2025 incident periodical.

WA mining pushes silicosis risk down to near zero

A new study in Occupational Medicine has found that respirable crystalline silica (RCS) exposures in the Western Australian mining industry are now so low that the risk of silicosis is negligible - even in job categories traditionally considered high risk.

Investigation reveals systemic failures behind catastrophic tyre blast that injured two workers at NSW quarry

A catastrophic tyre explosion that seriously injured two quarry workers was caused by a structural failure in the sidewall of a truck tyre and a series of systemic safety lapses, according to a detailed investigation released by the NSW Resources Regulator.

Quarry and refinery hit with fines as WA records 338 mining safety incidents in June, including falls, burns, silica exposure and near-miss events

Western Australia’s mining safety watchdog has released its June incident report, revealing a combined 338 notifiable and reportable incidents across the state’s operations, including several serious occurrences resulting in injuries and substantial corporate penalties.

Alcoa fined $400,000 after caustic spill injures workers and students at Kwinana refinery

Alcoa of Australia has been fined $400,000 and ordered to pay court costs after a caustic soda spill at its Kwinana alumina refinery injured multiple workers—including school students on work experience placement.