
Subscribe & Follow
Work still needs to be done on Zero Harm

The fatality frequency ratio of deaths per million hours worked in South Africa in the first quarter of 2019 was 0.04. This is double the number reported by mining countries such as Canada at 0.02 and four times that of Australia at 0.01.
The Department of Minerals and Energy (DME) has taken steps to ensure miners are kept safe. These steps include training in seismology so seismic activities underground can be detected before they spell danger. More innovative thinking and ideas are needed to ensure safety for workers while increasing production and creating more jobs.
Mine safety is not only a job for the DME but also the responsibility of all stakeholders, including organised labour and the mining companies themselves. “No one wants to invest where people die,’’ Peter Major, head of mining at Mergence Corporate Solutions said in a Daily Maverick report. It is in the interest of mining companies to reduce/eliminate incidents that make them unattractive to investment from would-be investors. They have a reputation to maintain.
So, let’s all work together to make mining safer, increase production and create jobs.
About Stanford Mazhindu
Stanford Mazhindu is the spokesperson of the trade union, UASA.Related
Plastic is good when we're good with plastic 25 Feb 2025 Western Cape EMS responds to record 69,000 calls during festive season 27 Jan 2025 2024 was record low for mining fatalities 24 Jan 2025 Brand safety, signal loss dominate concerns as Warc releases The future of programmatic 2024 report 14 Aug 2024 #WomensMonth: South African mining industry takes big step in fight against GBVF 4 Aug 2024 TikTok and AU Commission launch #SaferTogether for digital safety in Africa 18 Mar 2024
