ZERO HARM IN MINING IS ACHIEVABLE AS THE INDUSTRY RECALIBRATES ITS
HEALTH AND SAFETY INITIATIVES
Ogilvy PR

ZERO HARM IN MINING IS ACHIEVABLE AS THE INDUSTRY RECALIBRATES ITS HEALTH AND SAFETY INITIATIVES

Cape Town, 4 February 2025. The Minerals Council South Africa and its members are

continuously promoting and enhancing their interventions to eliminate fatalities, injuries and

illnesses through the sharing and adoption of leading practices, innovation, and collaboration

with key stakeholders to achieve Zero Harm.

The interventions driven by the Minerals Council through dedicated programmes and health

and safety teams together with its members, which account for 90% of South Africa’s annual

mineral production by value, the Department of Mineral and Petroleum Resources and

organised labour have delivered significant step changes in the journey to Zero Harm.

In 2024, the industry reported 42 fatalities, a 24% reduction from 55 in the previous year, and

a reduction in injuries to 1,841people, a 16% reduction from 2023 and a lower number of

incidents of occupational diseases. The record low number of fatalities last year is confirmation

that the industry is firmly on the path to Zero Harm when every employee returns home safely

and in good health.

“It is very important that we as CEOs understand that 42 is 42 too many. This is not just a

statistic. These are our colleagues we and their family and friends have lost. We must all

understand that we must – and can – get to zero,” says Japie Fullard, Chair of the Minerals

Council’s CEO Zero Harm Forum.

“It is very heartening that we are reaching these milestones of record low fatalities and injuries

on our journey to Zero Harm. The two key reasons for this are the collaboration and shared

vision of all stakeholders that Zero Harm is achievable and, very importantly, that we as mining

CEOs have honest and open discussions every month about incidents, how they happened

and what we learnt from them to eliminate repeats. This is real leadership to eliminate health

and safety incidents in our organisations,” he says.

“The more we focus on preventing injuries, the more fatalities will come down. It is not about

what we do after events but what we do before the time to make the workplace as safe and

healthy as possible,” says Mr Fullard. “There is not a single CEO I deal with who does not

believe we can achieve Zero Harm.”

The lagging indicators on safety performance are important but we need to place higher focus

on the leading indicators to provide us with “early-warnings” that would assist in incident

prevention.

Occupational diseases declined by 17% to 1,864 cases in 2024 from 2,233 the year before.

The Minerals Council has reviewed and recalibrated its Khumbul’ekhaya CEO-led health and

safety initiative during 2024 and will launch Khumbul’ekhaya Version 2 later in 2025. Building

on CEO Heartfelt Conversations last year, the Minerals Council is building on the learnings

the initiative has gathered since it launched the CEO-led health and safety initiative in 2019.


Khumbul’ekhaya Version 2 focuses on critical enhancements to leadership, innovation, and

accountability. This strategy embodies our collective vision of Zero Harm, returning every

worker home safely and healthy every day. It also emphasises a proactive, human-centred

approach to health and safety, incorporating new technologies, robust risk management

practices, adoption of proven leading practices, and closer collaboration with all stakeholders.

The Minerals Council is encouraged that its collaboration, interventions and initiatives agreed

with its members are resulting in significant step changes towards Zero Harm.

The mining industry has reduced fatalities in three decades by 91% to 42 from 484 in 1994.

Injuries have fallen by 78% from 8,347 thirty years ago.

In the past 15 years, TB and silicosis cases have reduced by more than 80%, with the

incidence of TB cases falling to 220 per 100,000 employees, which is half the national average

for South Africa.

Cases of noise-induced hearing loss in mining have reduced by 55% in the past 15 years and

is now coming under particular focus in the Minerals Council.

For further queries:

Allan Seccombe

Head Communications

Email: [email protected]

Web: www.mineralscouncil.org.za

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Oliver Fortune Chikodzore的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了