Vale Canada fined C$1m for mine fatality

26th October 2016 By: Henry Lazenby - Creamer Media Deputy Editor: North America

Vale Canada fined C$1m for mine fatality

Photo by: Bloomberg

VANCOUVER (miningweekly.com) – An Ontario provincial court has levied a C$1-million fine – the second-highest ever – against Vale Canada, after one worker died and another was critically injured while attempting to clear a jam in a rock-crushing machine at a plant near Sudbury.

Vale Canada pleaded guilty and has been fined an amount a little less than the fine of C$1.05-million issued in 2013 for the company's conviction and guilty plea for the death of two men at the Stobie underground mine, also near Sudbury, in 2011.

According to a court bulletin issued Wednesday, the incident took place at the company's rock-crushing facility in Copper Cliff on April 6, 2014. A rock crusher, used in the first stages of the refining process, became jammed with a broken-off steel moil point (a pointed tool) inside the crusher. There were no established procedures for removing broken or jammed materials from crushers.

After one failed attempt to remove the moil point, two workers positioned themselves above the jaws of the crusher to use a cutting torch to free the moil point, which weighed about 53.5 kg. As the cutting torch was applied, the heat softened the steel of the moil point, reducing friction and causing the moil point to be released from the compressive power of the crusher jaws created by stored energy. The moil point propelled vertically toward the two workers, striking each of them. One suffered fatal trauma and the other suffered critical injuries.

The subsequent Ministry of Labour investigation found the electrical motor of the crusher had not been locked out, and no measures were taken to release the stored energy of the crusher.

Vale Canada pleaded guilty to failing to ensure that gravity-stored energy was dissipated or contained while work was being done on the crusher, and to failing to provide information, instruction and supervision to a worker on a safe procedure to remove the broken moil point from the crusher. The company also pleaded guilty to failing to ensure that pinch points were guarded on the conveyor and crusher; however, these offences were not related to the fatality or injury.

A supervisor who was acting as a worker that day, Greg Taylor, pleaded guilty to failing to work in compliance with Ontario's mining regulation, and was fined C$3 000 for his involvement in the failed attempt to remove the moil point.

In addition to the fines, the court imposed a 25% victim fine surcharge as required by the Provincial Offences Act. The surcharge is credited to a special provincial government fund to assist victims of crime.