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Managing Major Hazards: The lessons of the Moura Mine disaster



The author, Andrew Hopkins, discusses the Moura Mine disaster which occurred in 1994. Eleven men died as a result of an explosion at the mine. Hopkins argues that the explosion was the result of organisational failure and that there were tell-tale signs of impending disaster. He also discusses the need to move responsibility for risk management up the corporate hierarchy to ensure that it is not o... more details
Key Features:
  • The Moura Mine disaster of 1994, which resulted in the death of eleven men, was the result of organisational failure.
  • The disaster was exacerbated by the company's failure to take responsibility for risk management up the corporate hierarchy.
  • The author argues that risk management should be moved up the corporate hierarchy to ensure that it is not overshadowed by production pressures.


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Features
Author Andrew Hopkins
ISBN 9781865087023
Publisher Allen & Unwin Pty Ltd
Manufacturer Allen & Unwin Pty Ltd
Description
The author, Andrew Hopkins, discusses the Moura Mine disaster which occurred in 1994. Eleven men died as a result of an explosion at the mine. Hopkins argues that the explosion was the result of organisational failure and that there were tell-tale signs of impending disaster. He also discusses the need to move responsibility for risk management up the corporate hierarchy to ensure that it is not overshadowed by production pressures.

Many organisations live with hazards that have the potential to cause disaster. This was the case at Moura underground coal mine in Central Queensland, where 11 men died in an explosion in 1994. Andrew Hopkins shows that the explosion was the result of organisational failure, and uses it to draw lessons about managing major hazards. He argues that there are always tell-tale signs of impending disaster, and that organisations need to find ways of gathering this information and reacting to it appropriately. The Moura story also demonstrates the need to move responsibility for risk management up the corporate hierarchy to ensure that it is not overshadowed by production pressures. Otherwise disasters will repeat themselves in horrifyingly similar ways. Managing Major Hazards is a gripping story and essential reading for occupational health and safety professionals, executives working in hazardous industries, policy makers, and readers interested in risk management and disaster studies.
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