Sunday Mirror

ABERFAN WARNING FOR COAL VILLAGES

Landslide ‘could happen again’

- BY ROBIN EVELEIGH sccops@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

ABANDONED coal tips in Welsh ex-mining towns risk triggering another Aberfan disaster, warns a landslide expert.

Storms linked to climate change are making them increasing­ly unstable, sparking fears of a repeat of the 1966 horror which killed 116 school children along with 28 adults.

Almost 330 disused tips, mostly in South Wales, are officially classed as having a higher potential risk of collapse – meaning they could endanger life or property – following a safety review.

But as the UK and Welsh government­s squabble over who should pay the estimated £600million cost of tip repairs, nearby homeowners fear for their lives.

Retired professor of geotechnic­al engineerin­g Eddie Bromhead, a renowned landslide expert, told the Sunday Mirror: “They are right to be fearful.

“What surprises me is not how many of these tips fail, but how few. Would I live next to one? The answer is no. They’re a disaster waiting to happen.

“I can’t predict when or where but I’m certain there’s something nasty going on.”

Chris Mutch, 50, rears chickens at the foot of Old Smokey – a volcano-shaped tip named by locals after the waste coal which once smouldered at its summit in

Stanleytow­n, Rhondda Cynon Taf. He said: “These spoil tips have always been a ticking bomb, and with climate change the clock is ticking a lot faster.

“We’re very wary of prolonged rainfall, because if the tip comes down there’s no way we’re going to outrun it.

“I’m responsibl­e for four staff and I’m thinking of putting in a panic room below the building just in case.”

A mix of councils, the Coal Authority, farmers and environmen­t watchdogs are supposed to make sure tips are safe.

UNFAIR

But last month the Law Commission said the legislatio­n is unfit for purpose.

The Welsh Government’s deputy minister for climate change, Lee Waters, said: “We have provided financial support to local authoritie­s to repair and maintain coal tips. We have dedicated a further £44.4m over the next three years.”

But Mr Waters added: “It is wholly unfair and, frankly, untenable for Westminste­r to continue to argue that Welsh communitie­s shoulder these costs.”

The UK Government said: “The Welsh Government received £18billion in the last autumn Budget and is more than adequately funded to manage its responsibi­lities, including coal tip safety.”

 ?? ?? ABERFAN HELL Rescuers’ frantic search for survivors
Picture: HOOK NEWS
FEARFUL Expert Chris by dangerous hill Old Smokey
ABERFAN HELL Rescuers’ frantic search for survivors Picture: HOOK NEWS FEARFUL Expert Chris by dangerous hill Old Smokey

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