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Mineral Mines & Quarries Inspectorate | Alert | No.408 V 1 | 25 May 2022

Impact of flooding on slope stability at mines and quarries

What happened?

Several mines and quarries have recently reported incidents associated with slope instability and failures in ground integrity to the MMQ Inspectorate.

How did it happen?

Extreme rainfall on the east coast of Australia this year has created one of the worst flood disasters on record for Queensland. The flooding caused the ground across parts of Queensland to become saturated and vulnerable to even small amounts of rain.

Key issues

Groundwater has a detrimental effect on slope stability. An industry-wide awareness of the likelihood of slope instability due to current groundwater conditions is critical. Saturated conditions leading to standing water within the pit can result in unsafe working conditions.

Recommendations

Given the current conditions, pit inspections should be conducted with diligence on a more frequent than usual basis. These inspections should be conducted by a competent person to ensure that geotechnical hazards are identified, and suitable controls implemented.

Legislation calls for a person, who has an obligation under the Act to manage risk in relation to ground control at a mine or quarry, to ensure appropriate measures are taken to prevent or control ground failures. The obligation holder must consider water inflow, drainage patterns, groundwater regimes, mine dewatering procedures and their influence on slope stability over time.

Consideration must be given to the following items to determine appropriate ground control measures:

If the ground conditions are determined to be unacceptable you should withdraw workers, establish an exclusion zone, and follow the risk management process in consultation with a person with appropriate geotechnical competencies.

Investigations are ongoing and further information may be published as it becomes available. The information in this publication is what is known at the time of writing.

We issue Safety Notices to draw attention to the occurrence of a serious incident, raise awareness of risks, and prompt assessment of your existing controls.

Authorised by Trevor Brown - Chief Inspector – Mineral Mines & Quarries

Contact: Deon Esterhuizen, Regional Inspector of Mines , 0477 758 323

Issued by Resources Safety & Health Queensland

Safety: This information is issued to promote safety through experience. It is not to be taken as a statement of law and must not be construed to waive or modify any legal obligation.
Placement: Place this announcement on noticeboards and ensure all relevant people in your organisation receive a copy, understand the content, findings and recommendations as applicable to their operation. SSEs should validate that recommendations have been implemented.

All information on this page (Impact of flooding on slope stability at mines and quarries - https://www.rshq.qld.gov.au/safety-notices/mines/impact-of-flooding-on-slope-stability-at-mines-and-quarries) is correct as of time of printing (Apr 16, 2024 5:07 pm).