logo
Chile's Codelco reports death of one of five trapped El Teniente miners

Chile's Codelco reports death of one of five trapped El Teniente miners

Reuters16 hours ago
SANTIAGO, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Chilean copper miner Codelco has discovered the remains of one of five trapped miners at its flagship El Teniente mine, it said on Saturday, bringing the death toll from a collapse caused by a strong tremor on Thursday to two people.
It said that the identity of the second victim must still be confirmed by authorities. One other person was reported dead on Thursday at the time of the accident, which occurred in the Andesita section of the mine.
"This discovery fills us with sadness, but it also tells us that we are in the right place, that the strategy we followed led us to them,' Andres Music, general manager of El Teniente, said in a statement.
He said Codelco would continue its efforts with "strength and hope," but with increased caution which could slow its progress.
Music did not provide more details about how Codelco recovered the worker's remains, or update the progress in reaching the area where others are believed to be trapped.
Earlier in the day, Music said Codelco had cleared just over a fifth of the blocked underground tunnels needed to reach the trapped workers, but had not yet made contact with them.
Rescue teams were using heavy machinery, and hoped to proceed at a rate of about 15 to 20 meters (49 to 65.6 feet) every 24 hours, he said, but the exact timing would be unpredictable.
The accident, which took place around 5:30 p.m. local time on Thursday, was caused by one of the largest tremors ever recorded at El Teniente, with the impact of a 4.2 magnitude quake.
Codelco is investigating whether the cause was mining activity or natural tectonic shifts in the earthquake-prone country.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man killed on North Yorkshire road he campaigned to make safer
Man killed on North Yorkshire road he campaigned to make safer

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Man killed on North Yorkshire road he campaigned to make safer

Tributes have been paid to a former councillor who was killed on a road he had campaigned to make Michael Duggan, 81, died in hospital after a collision between his car and a skip lorry on Friday morning on a section of the A19 he had previously highlighted as being Stephanie Duckett described Mr Duggan as a "fantastic" man who was "very passionate" about the village of Riccall, between Selby and said: "He was very much Mr Riccall, anything he could do he would for that village. "John was one of those people who once you met him, you didn't forget him. When he walked into a room everybody knew straight away he was there."He was a brilliant man and loyal friend."Mr Duggan was joining the A19 northbound at Riccall from the York Road junction when his Nissan Juke collided with a driver, a 42-year-old man from York, was arrested at the scene and was assisting officers with enquiries, according to North Yorkshire a parish councillor for Riccall, Mr Duggan had petitioned for changes to the layout of the A19 through the village as far back as 2007 and had called for a roundabout to be told the York Press newspaper in August that year that a junction on the road had been the site of numerous accidents and two said: "The stretch of the A19 that runs past Riccall is one of the fastest sections of the road, and the speed of traffic using this section is totally unacceptable to local people who are trying to enter and exit the village."Ms Duckett said, despite his death occurring on the next junction along to the one Mr Duggan had raised concerns about in the past, the road remained a concern."That road is tremendously busy and every year traffic just seems to multiply," she said."At one point there was money for the roundabout and it was never built and the cost now is just in the millions to do the same project."I honestly don't think it's every going to get done."Mr Duggan was elected to the Riccall ward of Selby Council with the Labour party in 2022 he stood for Camblesforth and Carlton in the North Yorkshire Council local election but lost to Conservative councillor Mike Jordan. Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Former military fighter pilot and his son feared dead after Majorca plane crash into the sea
Former military fighter pilot and his son feared dead after Majorca plane crash into the sea

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Former military fighter pilot and his son feared dead after Majorca plane crash into the sea

An ex-military fighter pilot and his teenage son are feared dead after their plane crashed into the sea off Majorca. Police confirmed on Sunday morning specialist divers were continuing to search for the occupants after locating the wreckage of the two-seat Team Rocket F-4 Raider sport plane capable of doing speeds of more than 250mph. The plane was seen crashing into the sea near the tourist town of Soller just after 8pm on Saturday after being spotted doing air acrobatics including 'daring but legal' 360-Degree turns. The occupants have been described locally as a former American military combat pilot aged around 60 who lives in Germany and has a holiday home in Majorca. He is understood to currently work as a commercial pilot. Eye-witnesses have said the plane he was believed to be in performed a series of adventurous stunts off the coast before returning to Binissalem Aerodrome where he had taken off from earlier in the day to pick up his passenger. Respected Majorcan daily Ultima Hora said the second person feared dead in the crash was the American pilot's 13-year-old child. Police have not yet made any official comment about the identities and nationalities of the confirmed two occupants of the plane. The Civil Guard said early on Sunday morning: 'The search for two occupants is continuing this morning following the plane accident yesterday evening. 'The accident happened around 8pm opposite the Soller lighthouse and in waters about 30 metres deep. 'Specialists from the Civil Guard's elite GEA diving unit, the Maritime Service and the Air Service are still conducting a search. In an initial statement late on Saturday the force said: 'The two-seater plane had left Binissalem Aerodrome around 6pm yesterday and the accident happened around 100 metres from the coast opposite the lighthouse in Soller Port. 'The remains of the plane have been located but we still have no information about the number of people inside. 'We have spoken to an eye-witness on a boat who saw the accident.'

Collapsed Chile mine: Race against time to rescue miners trapped under collapse at the world's largest underground copper mine after two are found dead
Collapsed Chile mine: Race against time to rescue miners trapped under collapse at the world's largest underground copper mine after two are found dead

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Collapsed Chile mine: Race against time to rescue miners trapped under collapse at the world's largest underground copper mine after two are found dead

Two people have been found dead following the partial collapse of the world's largest underground mine in Chile, during a search for five trapped workers. Chile's state-owned mining company Codelco said on Saturday that human remains had been recovered in the search at El Teniente mine in Rancagua. The mining company did not identify whose remains had been discovered. 'We know this news hits the families of our colleagues and our entire mining community hard,' Andres Music, the mine's general manager, said in a statement. 'This discovery fills us with sadness, but it also shows us that we are in the right place, that the strategy we followed led us to them,' he said, adding that search efforts would continue. Some 100 people have taken part in search efforts after the mine collapsed on Thursday following a 'seismic event'. It was not yet known whether the tremor was natural or caused by drilling. The tremor registered a magnitude of 4.2. 'It is one of the biggest events, if not the biggest, that the El Teniente deposit has experienced in decades,' Music said. The miners had been working at a depth of more than 900 metres in a bid to extend the mine to 1,200 metres at the time of the incident. The rescue team is still attempting to drill through 90 metres of rock to reach the miners. 'We will do everything that is humanly possible to rescue the five trapped workers,' Codelco's president, Maximo Pacheco, said during a news conference on Friday afternoon. 'All of our experience, all of our knowledge, all of our energy and all of our strength are dedicated to this cause and to seeing this through,' he added. Chile's president, Gabriel Boric, visited miners' relatives on Saturday and vowed to 'complete the search'. 'Codelco has all the resources, experience and technology to carry out' the search, he said. The body of another miner – not one of the five trapped – identified as Paulo Marin Tapia was found on Friday, shortly after the mine's partial collapse. The world's biggest copper supplier has now halted production at the site after the devastating collapse. El Teniente began operating in the early 1900s and boasts more than 4,500km of underground tunnels. In 2024, the site produced 356,000 metric tonnes of copper – nearly seven percent of the total for Chile. Codelco delayed reporting its quarterly results, including annual production guidance, on Friday, as it deals with the incident. Chile's mining industry is one of the safest on the planet, with a death rate of 0.02 per cent last year, according to the National Geology and Mining Service of Chile. It also lies in the seismically active 'Ring of Fire' that surrounds the shores of the Pacific Ocean. But in August 2010, a section of Chile's San Jose Mine collapsed, trapping 33 miners 2,300ft below the Atacama Desert. Seventeen days later, the rescue team discovered that the miners had survived the initial accident but were struggling to survive with very little food or potable water. The Chilean government requested technical advice from NASA and a team of experts traveled to the mine site and were on the scene from August 30 through September 5, 2010. The 33 miners were miraculously brought back to the surface sixty-nine days after the collapse, alive and surprisingly healthy after their ordeal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store