Title: Electrical Ex Regulation in NSW Mines
1 Electrical Ex Regulation in NSW Mines
UN ECE Geneva, November 2007
- John Francis Waudby
- Senior Inspector of Electrical Engineering
- Mine Safety Operations
2Overview
- Introduction NSW Mines
- Electrical equipment in mines
- Regulation and the use of IEC Standards and
Schemes -
3Mining in NSW
- Coal
- Metalliferous
- Quarrying
- Sand Dredging
- Opals
- Fatality rate 1/year
- LTIFR 16 per million hours
- Last fatality 09/01/2007
4Mining in NSW
- Total (continuous intermittent) 1700
- O/C Coal mines 37
- U/G Coal mines 34
- Coal production 150,000,000 tonnes / annum
- Coal U/G production 50,000,000 tonnes / annum
- Coal employment 13,000
5Role of the NSW Mining Regulator
- Mine site assessments
- Investigations
- Standards legislation development
- Communication to all stakeholders
- Industry support infrastructure
6Role of the NSW Mining Regulator
- Strategic Plan
- Standards Legislation Program
- Communication Program
- Industry Infrastructure Support Program
- Special Projects
- Mine Safety Technology Centre
7Electrical Engineering Safety
- Prevention of gas and/or dust explosions
- Prevention of electric shock and burns
- Prevention of fires
- Prevention of unintended operation of equipment
- Provision of electrical safeguards
8Coal Mining Electrical Engineering Safety
Performance
- Last fatal accident 23 years ago
- Last electrocution 24 years ago
- Last fatal explosion 28 years ago
9Coal Mining Electrical Engineering Safety
Performance
- Explosions / major gas ignitions
- 8/1/1979 - West Wallsend
- 24/7/1979 Appin
- 28/6/1995 - Endeavour
- 12/12/1997 - Munmorah
10NSW Mining Regulator - Experience with Electrical
Equipment
11Approval of Electrical Equipment
- Explosion protected equipment
- Electrically powered mobile machines for use U/G
- Electrically powered mobile machines for use in
O/Cs - Portable apparatus for use underground
- Electrical protection relays for use underground
12Approval of Electrical Equipment
- Electrical protection relays for use in open cuts
- Electric cables used in hazardous zones
- Caplamps
- Gas detectors
- Electric shotfiring equipment (U/G O/C)
13Approval of Electrical Equipment
- Based on a test report from a recognised test lab
- Reviewed by a competent engineer
- Signed by the Chief Inspector of Coal Mines
- Approval documents and number issued (no time
limit) - Database kept
14Approval of Electrical Equipment
- Some approvals were issued with non - compliance
to standards - Approval was initially free
- Conditions of manufacture / use were specified
- Approval related to use pit worthiness
15Approval of Electrical Equipment
- It was as a result of serious accidents
- One element in prescriptive technical regulation
- It was based on published standards
- Supported by competent mine electrical engineers
- Supported by an approved workshops scheme
16Approval of Electrical Equipment
- Approval / competency schemes were credible
- 1988 Risk assessment introduced to the coal
industry
17Evolution of approvals
- 1991 ALL approvals were subject to review
- Hazardous zone cables were deemed to be approved
- Approval scheme became stressed.
- Other organisations appointed as approvers
-
18Evolution of approvals
- Role of the regulator
- quality auditor
- database manager
- ad-hoc technical review
- By 1998 the approval scheme had deteriorated
19Evolution of approvals
- Equipment approved that was not Ex
- Approval processes were not good enough
- A new strategic direction was required
20From Approval to Certification
- Queensland had accepted CoCs as early as 1994
- NSW looked to follow Qld
- Active participation in Ex management schemes
- By 1998 risk assessment was well established
- In 1999 regulations changed along with approval
21From Approval to Certification
- Other equipment was required to comply with
specified standards - Portable apparatus had to be used within a
management scheme
22From Approval to Certification
- 2002 - confident in the ANZ Ex scheme and the ANZ
Ex CBs - AUS Ex and ANZ Ex CoCs deemed suitable (with
conditions) - The IEC Ex scheme commenced acceptance extended
to Australian issued IEC Ex CoCs
23From Approval to Certification
- Extensive review of the IEC Ex scheme conducted
- Canvassed industry via a discussion paper for
full IEC Ex acceptance - Legislation changed in December 2006
- approval became registration
- Ex equipment was not included
- Ex equipment had to meet specified criteria
24From Approval to Certification
- Continuing to participate in Ex scheme MCs
- Continuing to review IEC Ex CoCs and ATRs
- Planned random audits of IEC Ex ATRs and CoC s
from ALL types of IEC bodies - Supported by a specific minesite program.
25Overview Approval to Certification
- Approval and competency schemes evolved
- Legislation embraced contemporary OHS Mngt
- National International certification schemes
matured - Industry culture evolved
- All of this allowed the DPI to embrace
certification - Redirect resources to mine site activities.
26Summary Regulation Ex equipment
- Coal mine explosions are high risk events.
- Ex is a critical risk control
- Additional scrutiny is needed.
- The scrutiny must be credible
- Ex equipment must be Ex throughout its life.
- When new, it is as good as it gets
- Ex supported by the correct regulatory
requirements
27Ex equipment - Additional scrutiny
- Be applied at the proper points of the equipment
life cycle. - Support all activities throughout the life cycle.
- Support the hierarchy of risk controls
- Provide for a level of risk less than or equal to
what we do now - Recognise the harsh mining environment
- Be competent
- Be credible
28Ex equipment - Credible scrutiny
- Set standard
- Consistent and repeatable
- Competent people
- Proper procedures
- Fit for purpose equipment facilities
- Managed work environment
- Ethical work environment
29Principles for managing Ex equipment
- Ex equipment to be certified
- Suppliers of equipment to provide sufficient
life-cycle information - Requires mines to have Ex repairs done at
licensed facilities - Requires a competent mine electrical engineer
- Requires an Electrical Engineering Management
Plan - Requires mines to establish electrical competency
requirements
30IEC Ex Support for the regulator
- IEC Standards and Ex Schemes provide
- Standards of design
- Competent designers
- Third party design verification
- Confidence in the manufacture
- Ex equipment arrives at the mine in an Ex
condition.
31IEC Ex Support for the regulator
- Equipment is installed, commissioned, maintained
used properly - Provision of information
- Selection, installation, commission, inspect and
maintenance standards - Competency for life-cycle management (proposed)
32IEC Ex Support for the regulator
- Ex management dictates overhaul and repair
- Equipment overhauled and repaired back to its
certified state - Provision of information
- Repair and overhaul standards
- Independent assessment of competencies
- Independent assessment of workshops
- Facilities, tools, equipment and measurement
- Work processes, competencies and management
systems
33Summary - IEC Ex supporting the regulator
- The IEC Ex standards and IEC Ex schemes provide
for - provision of information
- life cycle management
- appropriate independent assessment at
appropriate points - All of the above is required by contemporary OHS
legislation
34A regulator using IEC Ex
- Currently the DPI
- has accepted equipment certified under the IEC Ex
scheme. - is monitoring the implementation of the IEC Ex
services scheme - IEC Ex CoCs have been accepted via a gazette
notice - The regulator still retains prohibition powers
35OBSERVATIONS
- IEC Ex certification of equipment - Very
confident that it is Ex - Regulators can use this as a minimum expectation
- The extent of national regulation is dependent on
safety culture - Countries with no Ex certification can use the
IEC Ex scheme with confidence - Countries with developed national schemes can
easily transition to IEC Ex - Countries who rely on IEC Ex must participate
36CONCLUSIONS
- The IEC Ex standards and schemes can aid
- Life cycle management of Ex equipment
- The regulators aims for electrical engineering
safety - A mine operators fulfilment of OHS obligations
- An equipment suppliers fulfilment of OHS
obligations - Credibility of the schemes is a critical
component - We are committed to a highly credible IEC Ex
scheme
37Other information Contact details
- Other Information
- Technical and Safety Regulation of the Energy
Sector - Discussion paper at www.ena.asn.au
- Contact details
- Website www.minerals.nsw.gov.au/safety
- Email john.waudby_at_dpi.nsw.gov.au