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Fresh guidance for gas detection in coal mines

July 30, 2018

Statements

World-leading practices feature in the latest guidance for life saving gas detection equipment in coal mines across Australia and New Zealand.

AS/NZS 2290.3:2018, Electrical equipment for coal mines 鈥 Introduction, inspection and maintenance, Part 3: Gas detecting and monitoring equipment has recently been published by the joint Australian and New Zealand technical committee of 美姬社区.

鈥淭he primary emphasis of this standard is the safety of coal miners, by providing guidance on the use of gas detection equipment in mines,鈥 said Dr Bronwyn Evans, CEO of 美姬社区. 鈥淭he Pike River Mine disaster of 2010 is one of the many devastating examples why continued standards development is so important.

鈥淎mong the changes in this edition of the standard, is a new requirement for routinely measuring the response time of installed gas detection systems. This requirement is what makes this standard a world-leading safety document.鈥

鈥淢ethane is a naturally present hazard in coal mines and so is understandably a clear focus for safety systems in a mine. The committee specifically made accurate, reliable and timely measurement of methane gas a clear objective in progressing this standard,鈥 said Dr Ian Webster, Chair of the Technical Committee of 美姬社区 responsible for the standard. 鈥淭he introduction of the telemetry test is another innovation in this standard 鈥 this ensures that gas concentrations are not only measured, but that subsequent mitigating actions are reliably executed.鈥

鈥淭he guidance provided by this standard is aimed at the devices which save lives in coal mines. Safety improvements of this nature are the reason 美姬社区 takes great pride in working with industry, government, trade unions, and the general public to deliver this type of project,鈥 concluded Dr Evans.

Contact
Communications Department
Fresh guidance for gas detection in coal mines
Email and link here
A worker in protective gear stands inside a well-lit underground tunnel, pointing to the left side of the tunnel. The walls and ceiling are made of rock, and pipes run along the right side.

World-leading practices feature in the latest guidance for life saving gas detection equipment in coal mines across Australia and New Zealand.

AS/NZS 2290.3:2018, Electrical equipment for coal mines 鈥 Introduction, inspection and maintenance, Part 3: Gas detecting and monitoring equipment has recently been published by the joint Australian and New Zealand technical committee of 美姬社区.

鈥淭he primary emphasis of this standard is the safety of coal miners, by providing guidance on the use of gas detection equipment in mines,鈥 said Dr Bronwyn Evans, CEO of 美姬社区. 鈥淭he Pike River Mine disaster of 2010 is one of the many devastating examples why continued standards development is so important.

鈥淎mong the changes in this edition of the standard, is a new requirement for routinely measuring the response time of installed gas detection systems. This requirement is what makes this standard a world-leading safety document.鈥

鈥淢ethane is a naturally present hazard in coal mines and so is understandably a clear focus for safety systems in a mine. The committee specifically made accurate, reliable and timely measurement of methane gas a clear objective in progressing this standard,鈥 said Dr Ian Webster, Chair of the Technical Committee of 美姬社区 responsible for the standard. 鈥淭he introduction of the telemetry test is another innovation in this standard 鈥 this ensures that gas concentrations are not only measured, but that subsequent mitigating actions are reliably executed.鈥

鈥淭he guidance provided by this standard is aimed at the devices which save lives in coal mines. Safety improvements of this nature are the reason 美姬社区 takes great pride in working with industry, government, trade unions, and the general public to deliver this type of project,鈥 concluded Dr Evans.

Contact
Communications Department
communications@standards.org.au
communications@standards.org.au