HC Deb 09 November 1987 vol 122 c51W
Mr. Patchett

To ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will hold an inquiry into why major injuries in the coal industry per 100,000 man shifts have trebled in the last seven years; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Cope

[holding answer 2 November 1987]: There are no plans to call an inquiry. Major injury rates over the last seven years are not comparable as two legislative changes widened the definition of major injury to include new categories of injury and these increased the number of accidents reported. The first change was on 1 January 1981 when the Notification of Accidents and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1985 (NADO) came into force and the second on 1 April 1986 when the Reporting of Injuries Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1985 (RIDDOR) came into operation. A more accurate reflection of the accident rate is provided by fatal and total accidents which were unaffected by these changes. The coal mining fatal accidents rate has fallen in this period from 0.08 in 1980 per 100,000 manshifts to 0.05 in 1986–87. The total accident rate has also fallen from 72.66 in 1980 to 45.22 in 1986–87.

1986
Regions June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec
South East 2,665 12,683 15,815 1,360 11,515 21,532 18,105
London 9,042 13,163 19,638 14,865 20,392 26,844 25,871
South West 420 4,114 7,183 5,802 6,720 10,728 8,324
West Midlands 7,586 15,726 12,740 16,620 28,493 29,770 20,056
East Midlands 1,126 7,593 11,046 8,221 11,875 18,371 18,013
Yorkshire and Humberside 8,698 13,826 13,290 14,070 19,940 14,346
North West 1,640 23,886 26,490 22,308 25,553 32,985 28,784
Northern 4,539 8,546 11,622 19,925 10,772 16,387 12,313
Wales 660 7,706 8,802 6,366 7,685 11,128 9,114
Scotland 3,601 12,981 14,193 13,066 15,000 20,495 18,215
GB Total 34,291 114,153 135,674 111,823 152,075 208,180 173,141
GB Cumulative 34,291 148,444 284,118 395,941 548,016 756,196 929,337