Methane Monitors Recovered In Mine Blast Probe
This methane monitor is the make and model of the monitors recovered from a longwall mining machine in the Upper Big Branch coal mine, according to Ronald Wooten of the West Virginia Office of Miners' Health Safety and Training. Investigators are analyzing the devices to determine whether they were tampered with and perhaps contributed to the deadly April 5 explosion. www.csecorporation.com hide caption
toggle caption www.csecorporation.comIf the monitors were not working properly the day of the blast, methane gas could have formed without warning, and the cutting tool or shear on the mining machine could have sparked an explosion.
"We have visually inspected the methane monitors on the longwall face, and there is no evidence of them being bridged out," said Shane Harvey, Massey Energy's vice president and general counsel. "If they had been bridged out, we believe it would have been apparent."
But that doesn't match what West Virginia investigators have told Ronald Wooten, who oversees the state's mine disaster probe and directs the West Virginia Office of Miners' Health, Safety and Training.
"I can't say whether [the monitors were] bridged or not," Wooten said. "I can't tell you whether [they were] in working order or not. ... We'll know more when we check the [monitors] this weekend."
Sponsor MessageMSHA's Stricklin agreed: "I just think there's more testing to be done before we can conclusively say that's the case."
He added that monitors can be rendered useless in other ways.
"[You] could put a plastic bag over the sensor head," Stricklin explained. "[You] could move the sensor to a location that it wouldn't pick up methane very readily, and [you] could do it electronically, so there's a number of ways to defeat the methane sensor from actually detecting gas."
Methane monitors can also be recalibrated so they won't shut off mining machines when gas approaches the danger zone. That would be done in order to continue producing coal if the methane monitors kept shutting down the machines.
Some types of tampering with monitors could be detected by the device that operates like a black-box recorder. Its recovery was first reported Wednesday by Ken Ward of the Charleston Gazette.
Wooten told the Gazette and NPR that the device recorded key information about the methane monitors and the longwall mining machine in the minutes, hours and days before the explosion.
"The black box on the longwall system is very similar to a black box on an airplane that you hear so much about in that it looks for functions," Wooten said in an NPR interview. "It looks for when the longwall is shut down. It looks for when the longwall is cutting. We have about six days worth of data on this particular box."
The black-box data have revealed at least two key pieces of information so far. First, the methane monitors didn't pick up much methane gas in those six days before the blast. And second, an emergency shutoff button was used to shut down the longwall machine about 90 seconds before the explosion.
Stricklin suggested that one reason for the use of the emergency shutoff button just before the blast was that there may have been "methane gas in the area and they wanted to try to knock the power so the gas didn't get to any electrical components on that machine."
Sponsor MessageWooten said there may also be a benign explanation. The shutdown occurred during a shift change. "You can call it an emergency stop if you like," Wooten explained. "But it's often used, usually used, frankly, to shut a machine down."
Still, the low methane readings before the blast point to a fundamental conundrum for investigators. If there was enough methane for an explosion, why didn't the methane monitors shut down the machines? As Wooten put it, "Why weren't bells and whistles going off?"
This seeming contradiction explains why there's so much interest in the recovered monitors and any evidence of tampering.
Now, four months to the day since the mine was ripped apart by the explosion, investigators are finally in a position to determine whether the longwall methane monitors were tampered with or disabled.
Wooten was mindful of the anniversary and the task.
"There's nothing, nothing at all that we can do for these 29 lives that were lost except do our very best to make sure it doesn't happen again," Wooten said. "And that's what we're doing."
Stricklin said federal investigators won't reveal the results of this weekend's analysis of the monitors until he can brief the families of the workers who were killed. That briefing is expected in West Virginia on Tuesday.
Web Resources Read Ken Ward's Report On The Recovery Of The 'Black Box' In The 'Charleston Gazette'下一篇:Raccoon dogs may have been linked to the pandemic. What are they?
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