Government has released the Inspector-General for Emergency Management's (IGEM) Hazelwood Mine Fire Inquiry - Annual Report 2017 and Review of SKM Coolaroo Recycling Plant Fire report.
Read a summary of the Victorian Government media release below.
14 December 2017
The Hazelwood coal-mine fire burned for 45 days in early 2014, making it the largest and longest-running mine fire in the Latrobe Valley.
The Implementation Plan outlines the Government’s response to the 2014 and reopened Hazelwood Mine Fire Inquiry Reports.
The latest Inspector-General for Emergency Management’s (IGEM) report, tabled in Victorian Parliament today, shows 187 of 246 action items have been completed and highlights a number of key areas of progress, including:
- Increased investment in health services and programs for the Latrobe Valley region
- The formation of the Latrobe Health Assembly and appointment of the Latrobe Valley Mine Rehabilitation Commissioner
- Improved information for decision makers before, during and after emergencies, including air-quality monitoring and predictive data on smoke and fires
- Support for the rehabilitation of mine sites in the Latrobe Valley, through significant increases in rehabilitation bonds and introduction of progressive rehabilitation milestones for coal-mine operators.
Overall, the report found the government has delivered on the vast majority of commitments laid out in the Implementation Plan.
Reforms still underway include reviewing the capacity of local governments to fulfil their emergency management roles and responsibilities, and the Latrobe Valley Regional Rehabilitation Strategy, which will inform the safe and sustainable rehabilitation of mine sites.
IGEM’s review into the Coolaroo recycling plant fire in July 2017 was also released today, examining how well the emergency-management sector put into practice the reforms introduced following the Hazelwood fire.
The review found the response to the Coolaroo fire was effective in delivering on the intent of the Hazelwood implementation plan’s recommendations.
In particular, the way agencies worked together to bring the Coolaroo fire under control was overwhelmingly positive, while efforts to reduce community exposure to harmful smoke were also effective.