Nelson Mail

Extra shift for Pike recovery

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The Pike River Recovery Agency is set to add an extra shift to its undergroun­d schedule.

Twenty-nine men died in an explosion at the mine in November 2010 and work is being carried out to recover any remains and look for clues as part of a criminal investigat­ion.

Minister Responsibl­e for Pike River Re-entry Andrew Little told RNZ the work was taking longer than initially thought. ‘‘In fact, we thought roughly by now we would be winding up the project.

‘‘But because of the extra planning required, the extra measures for safety that were taken last year, including installing the Rocsil plug, the project has taken longer. We are about to ramp up the workforce so we can have two shifts doing the recovery work of the drift.’’ Little said he would expect it to take roughly three months to reach the rockfall when the second team is added, with 15 metres from the 170m barrier already forensical­ly examined by the lone team working undergroun­d. ‘‘We are expecting there will be between 20m to 40m a day that will be covered when we put a second shift on ... but the critical thing is we are not going to compromise safety,’’ Little said. That would mean it would take roughly three months to reach the rockfall, he said. One of the most crucial areas with potential clues – Pit Bottom in Stone – was also near the rockfall.

‘‘If there was anybody who was able to get out after the initial blast, the place they are most likely to have gone to is in the Pit Bottom in Stone. ‘‘I don’t want to hold out the possibilit­y that we will recover human remains.

‘‘It is a small possibilit­y but we will at least get good informatio­n from that area,’’ Little said.

The Pike River Recovery Agency has also signalled the $36 million funding for the project won’t be enough. However, Little said that while the delay had increased the potential for a cost blowout, that was not the case yet. At this stage the agency was well within budget, he said, and there was no request made to Cabinet for additional funding yet. The minister said he was keeping a close eye on the expenses. ‘‘We know the circumstan­ces have changed somewhat from when [the budget for expenses] was put together two years ago.’’ – RNZ

 ?? KIRK HARGREAVES/STUFF ?? Twenty-nine men died in an explosion at the Pike River mine on the West Coast in November 2010.
KIRK HARGREAVES/STUFF Twenty-nine men died in an explosion at the Pike River mine on the West Coast in November 2010.

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