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Unusual plume on Jerrys Plains

04 Mar, 2010 03:00 AM
A MASSIVE plume of orange dust sent skywards after blasting at the Hunter Valley Operations open-cut coalmine near Jerrys Plains is being investigated by authorities.

The dust plume was seen and photographed on Friday afternoon by Newcastle environmentalist Brian Purdue, who was driving along the Golden Highway at Jerrys Plains when it came into view.

"It seemed pretty enormous to me but I wasn't sure how often this sort of thing happened," Mr Purdue said.

Hunter Valley Operations is owned by the Rio Tinto subsidiary Coal & Allied, and spokeswoman Alison Smith said Friday's incident was "highly unusual".

"A yellow to orange plume is occasionally visible immediately after a blast, but is quickly dispersed by the wind," Ms Smith said.

"The colour comes from the interaction of water with the explosive material, or interaction with some clay material.

"The wind direction was considered prior to firing, but the density of the plume was extremely unusual.

"We have contacted the explosives supplier to help us determine the cause, and to discuss possible mitigation methods to ensure it does not happen again."

Dust and blasting noise have been major points of dispute between the coal industry and Hunter Valley horse studs.

Henry Plumptre, the managing director of Darley Australia, said the photograph was "unusual" but "dust from the spoil piles and the pits themselves are a daily occurrence".

"Flying in from Sydney the dust is particularly noticeable close to Muswellbrook," Mr Plumptre said.

Alisha Chapman, a spokeswoman for the NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water, said a full report had been sought from Coal & Allied and "any exceedences or breaches of licence will be acted upon".

Ms Chapman said the State Government had agreed to set up a "high-quality ambient air monitoring network" of as many as 14 monitoring stations.

These stations would test particles down to 10 microns in diameter and test data would be available "in real time" through a government website.

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comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Horse, all coal should be mined underground. Surface mining has additional health costs that are borne by the taxpayer, not the miner, which is why the miners prefer this method. It is cheaper for them. Remember that the price of coal is not determined by the cost of extraction, it is determined by market demand. Presently the price of electricity in Australia has gone up because there is so much demand for coal from China which has driven the coal price up.. and the miners are banking huge profits.
Posted by ounceOfPrevention, 4/03/2010 11:01:20 AM, on The Herald
The sky may not be falling in but are lungs in this area? What price for the planet & human health??? Fossil fools do need to try renewables they could so easily be DO-ABLE! Coal Costs The Earth... & Human health along the way...Costing all ,but the China Miner.Thanks for the enlightening pic Mr Purdue & also "Dad" for the actual account & insight.
Posted by Climate Crisis, 4/03/2010 11:30:00 AM, on The Herald
Sorry Dad but you are wrong. The yellow to orange plume that sometimes is seen after blasting is made up of various Nitrous Oxides. It is nasty stuff though. Excessive amounts of water in the blast holes can exacerbate the amount of plume
Posted by Fireman Sam, 4/03/2010 12:33:40 PM, on The Herald
It appears the only problem the mine has is they should have blasted with a stronger wind. As " it is usually dispersed with by the wind". I'm guessing Alison and her family don't live near this mine.
Posted by Clean Air?, 6/03/2010 8:58:08 AM, on The Herald
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BLAST OFF: Brian Purdue's dramatic picture of the orange dust plume on Friday.
BLAST OFF: Brian Purdue's dramatic picture of the orange dust plume on Friday.

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