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Is this just an industrial accident or a bell for an industry that is being traded at the expense of human lives?
According to Chinese media and many international sources, the gas explosion that occurred at the Liushenyu coal mine in Shanxi province killed at least 82 people while nearly 150 workers were working underground. Rescue work continues in the context that the risk of tunnel collapse and gas leakage has not been completely controlled.
What makes the online community fiercely debate is that although modern mining technology has developed strongly, serious coal mine accidents in China have continued to occur for many years.
STATISTICAL TABLE OF SOME COAL MINE TRAGEDIES IN CHINA
Year Location Number of deaths
2010 Ha Nam 26 people
2014 Liaoning 24 people
2019 Son Tay 15 people
2024 Ha Nam 10 people
2026 Son Tay At least 82 people
Many industrial safety experts believe that the pressure of huge coal output in China is causing many mines to operate in dangerous conditions. China is still the world's largest coal consumer and coal still plays a backbone role in the national power system.
NOTEWORTHY
The time of the explosion occurred around 7:29 p.m. local time
Nearly 150 workers are working underground
The question is related to methane gas accumulation
Rescuers must workg through the night
Some tunnel areas are at risk of further collapse
Many netizens asked extremely harsh questions
“When will robots and AI replace humans in dangerous jobs like this?”
Meanwhile, many countries such as Australia and Canada have sharply increased the rate of automation in mining to reduce casualties. Some modern mines operate almost entirely with self-propelled vehicles, drones and toxic gas sensor systems 24/7.
COMPARISON OF LEVELS OF MINING AUTOMATION
Country Automation level
Australia Very high
Canada Cao
China Medium to high
India Average
Some developing countries Low
This accident is not just a Chinese problem but also raises global questions about the cost of cheap energy, the pace of industrialization and labor safety in the mining industry.
If technology is strong enough to send people to Mars, why do many workers still have to risk their lives underground every day?
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