Gases force crews to abandon US mine rescue

April 08, 2010 08:39 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:49 pm IST - MONTCOAL, West Virginia

The family of deceased coal miner Josh Napper mourns, seated is his mother, Pam Napper, centre, with his daughter Jenna Leigh Napper, 20 months, his father Scott Napper, top right, and the mother of his child, Jennifer Ziegler, top left, on Wednesday. Photo: AP.

The family of deceased coal miner Josh Napper mourns, seated is his mother, Pam Napper, centre, with his daughter Jenna Leigh Napper, 20 months, his father Scott Napper, top right, and the mother of his child, Jennifer Ziegler, top left, on Wednesday. Photo: AP.

Dangerous gases forced rescue crews to abandon the search on Thursday for four coal miners missing since an explosion killed 25 colleagues in the worst U.S. mining disaster in more than two decades.

Rescue crews had been working their way through the Upper Big Branch mine by rail car and on foot early Thursday, but officials said they had to turn back because of an explosive mix of gases in the area they needed to search.

“We think they are in danger and that’s the whole intent of evacuating them from the mine,” said Kevin Stricklin of the Mine Health and Safety Administration.

The rescuers made it to within about 1,000 feet (304 meters) of an airtight chamber with four days worth of food, water and oxygen where they hoped the miners might have sought refuge. They did not make it far enough to see the bodies of the dead or determine if anyone had made it to the chamber.

Mr. Stricklin acknowledged the evacuation was a setback, but said he hoped crews would be able to get back in within a few hours after a bigger hole was drilled to allow fresh air into the mine. He said the families of the dead and missing understood the need to pull rescuers out.

“It’s a roller coaster for these people,” Mr. Stricklin said. “It’s very emotional. You can only imagine what it would be like.”

Rescuers had already had to wait to enter the mine until crews drilled holes deep into the earth to ventilate lethal carbon monoxide and highly explosive hydrogen as well as methane gas, which has been blamed for the explosion.

The air quality was deemed safe enough early in the day for four teams of eight members each to go on what officials were still calling a rescue mission, but later tests showed the air was too dangerous to continue.

Once inside, rescuers had to walk through an area officials have described as strewn with bodies, twisted railroad track, shattered concrete block walls and vast amounts of dust. Each team member was wearing 30 pounds (13.6 kilograms) of breathing equipment, lugging first-aid equipment and trying to see through total darkness with only a cap lamp to light the way.

Officials and townsfolk alike acknowledged they didn’t expect to find any of the four missing miners alive more than two days after the massive explosion. Poisonous gases have filled the underground tunnels since Monday afternoon’s blast.

“This was a scenario that we didn’t want,” Gov. Joe Manchin said as he briefed reporters about the evacuations. Families of those still in the mine continued to arrive at the mine’s training centre to await word of their fate, and Mr. Manchin estimated that perhaps 100 have gathered so far.

“They understand that if we have any hope of survival and they’re in a rescue chamber, then they’re OK,” Mr. Manchin said. “That’s the sliver of hope we have.”

Seven bodies had been brought out on Monday and authorities hoped to recover 18 others known dead from the mine owned by Massey Energy Co., which has been cited for numerous safety violations.

The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration has appointed a team of investigators to look into the blast, which officials said may have been caused by a build-up of methane.

The mine produced more than 1.2 million tons of coal last year and uses the lowest-cost underground mining method, making it more profitable. It produces metallurgical coal that is used to make steel and sells for up to $200 a ton - more than double the price for the type of coal used by power plants.

The confirmed death toll of 25 was the highest in a U.S. mine since 1984, when 27 people died in a fire at a mine in Orangeville, Utah. If the four missing bring the total to 29, it will be the worst U.S. coal mining disaster since a 1970 explosion killed 38 in Hyden, Kentucky.

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