This initiative builds on previous milestones set by the Mine Health and Safety Council in 2003 and revised in 2014, aimed at enhancing the working conditions for all mining personnel.
Since 2014, incidents of occupational diseases in the mining industry have decreased by 72%. The number of fatalities related to safety incidents has declined by 35% between 2014 and 2023.
The industry came close to meeting—and in some instances surpassed—the milestones set for 2024. The milestones included eliminating fatalities and serious injuries, reducing occupational lung diseases caused by inhalation of silica, coal, and platinum group metal dust, reducing noise-induced hearing loss, reducing the tuberculosis incidence rate below the national average, and providing counselling, testing, and treatment of mineworkers living with HIV.
The three stakeholders have set milestones for December 2034, including mental health screening, improved safety for women in mining, and reducing gender-based violence and femicide in the workplace, including the use of specially designed personal protective equipment.
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“We commit ourselves to achieving the new milestones that we have collectively set to accelerate our quest for zero harm in our industry,” says Dr Nombasa Tsengwa, President of the Minerals Council.
“We are unrelenting in our ambition to eliminate health and safety incidents across the mining industry, including beyond employment. The Minerals Council remains committed to the industry goal of zero harm, in which every mine worker returns from work without harm every day,” she said.
The Minerals Council and its members have implemented interventions and programmes to improve the health and safety of all employees.
“Today, we have a workplace where there are less airborne pollutants, less noise, and generally fewer hazards. Mining is a far safer place than when we started on this journey. Jointly, with the Department of Mineral and Petroleum Resources and organised labour, we are striving for an inclusive working environment where health and safety are of paramount importance,” says Japie Fullard, Chair of the Minerals Council’s CEO Zero Harm Forum.
Since 1994, the number of fatalities on mines has decreased by 88%, from 484 to 55 in 2023. Injuries have decreased by 75% to 2,080 from 8,347 in that period. The industry reported a record low of 49 fatalities in 2022.
The mining industry has made significant inroads into reducing cases of silicosis and noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL), with reductions of 90% and 86%, respectively, between 2003 and 2022.
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“We will review our initiatives and interventions as we strive to achieve our ambition of zero harm. We are working with all stakeholders on research, technology, and innovation to modernise our industry and to make it safer and healthier. We look forward to our collaboration in reaching the milestones as tripartite partners in the coming years,” says Fullard.
In 2011, the Minerals Council initiated CEO-level discussions on health and safety, which are now institutionalised as the CEO Zero Harm Forum. This forum meets quarterly to review and advise on our performance regarding health and safety.
The Minerals Council Board has initiated a monthly Safety Hour of Learning where recent incidents are shared with the sole purpose of learning from each other and preventing similar incidents in the future.
In 2019, the Minerals Council adopted the Khumbul’ekhaya Health and Safety Strategy, a comprehensive approach aimed at promoting step-change in health and safety measures.
The Minerals Council is reviewing the industry’s health and safety performance and is enhancing the Khumbul’ekhaya Strategy to implement a second version to achieve the 2034 milestones.
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