A in China鈥檚 northern province of Shanxi killed at least 90 people, state media reported Saturday.
China’s official Xinhua 小萝莉影视 Agency said the accident at Changzhi city鈥檚 Liushenyu coal mine happened on Friday evening. Around 247 workers were on duty at the time.
Shanxi province is known as China鈥檚 main . With a size larger than Greece and a population of around 34 million, the province鈥檚 hundreds of thousands of miners dug 1.3 billion tons (1.17 billion metric tons) of coal last year, nearly a third of China鈥檚 total.
Mining disasters are common in China, where rapid industrialization came with intense resource exploitation, poor working conditions and a weak regulatory framework.
Mine owners and local officials are frequently blamed for putting profits ahead of safety. Underground explosions often are blamed on lack of ventilation equipment to clear gas that seeps from the coal bed. In the past two decades, the Chinese government has been making efforts to reduce mining deaths, by improving safety and closing some smaller mines.
Here are some major incidents:
2023: 53 people were killed after a at an open-pit mine in northern China鈥檚 Inner Mongolia region.
2009: 108 miners died as a result of a gas explosion at the state-run Xinxing mine in Heilongjiang province near the border with Russia. State broadcaster CCTV displayed a diagram showing the miners trapped about a third of a mile underground. Footage showed one entrance was blocked and rescuers in orange suits with breathing equipment attempting to enter through another.
2005: 171 people died in a blast at the Dongfeng coal mine in Qitaihe in Heilongjiang province.
2005: 214 miners were killed following a gas explosion at the Sunjiawan coal mine in the Liaoning province in China鈥檚 northeast.
2004: 166 died in a gas explosion at the Chenjiashan coal mine in the Shaanxi province, in China’s northwest.
2004: 148 people were killed in a gas explosion at the Daping coal mine in China’s inland Henan province.
2000: 162 people died after an explosion at the Muchonggou coal mine in the mountainous Guizhou province in China’s southwest.
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