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China - 82 killed in China’s worst coal mine accident for more than a decade

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Mining accidents China

China - 82 killed in China’s worst coal mine accident for more than a decade

Liushenyu coal mine, Changzhi, Shanxi Province

Location

Lat: 36.611 Lng: 112.2027
Event date (UTC)
23 May 2026 06:30
Last update (UTC)
23 May 2026 15:19
Severity
high
Level
3.0
Confidence level
News / trusted media
Country
China
Continent
Asia
Latitude
36.611
Longitude
112.2027
Deaths
82
Expire date
26 May 2026 15:19
Address / Affected area
Liushenyu coal mine, Changzhi, Shanxi Province

Description

At least 82 people have been killed in a blast at a coal mine in the central Chinese province of Shanxi.
State news agency Xinhua reported that the gas explosion happened in Qinyuan county, about 520km (320 miles) southwest of Beijing, on Friday after the mine issued a carbon monoxide alert late on Friday.
There were 247 workers underground at the time of the blast. It was unclear whether other workers remained trapped.
The accident is the deadliest coal mine disaster in over a decade. Although China has improved its safety record in recent years, there has still been a steady stream of fatalities.
In one of the worst incidents, 53 miners were killed at an opencast mine in Xinjing in Inner Mongolia following a landslide in February 2023.
President Xi Jinping called for rescuers to “make every effort” to find the missing and said the aftermath must be “properly handled”.
He said those responsible for the accident should be held to account, adding: “All regions and departments must learn from the lessons of the accident, remain vigilant regarding workplace safety, thoroughly investigate, rectify all types of risks and hidden dangers, and resolutely prevent and curb the occurrence of major and serious accidents.”