LVLIANG: Four workers were killed after a roof collapse late Wednesday at the Guanjiaya coal mine in Xingxian county in northern China’s Shanxi province, with local authorities confirming the deaths early Thursday after an overnight rescue operation. The accident happened at about 9:15 p.m. on April 1 and trapped four people underground. Emergency crews were sent to the site immediately, and the workers were brought to the surface at 2:46 a.m. on April 2, but showed no signs of life.

Authorities said the collapse occurred at a mine in Xingxian, which is administered by Lvliang city, in Shanxi. Public reports identified the site as the Guanjiaya operation and said the mine is run by a company affiliated with the Shanxi unit of China National Coal Group. Available company information says the mine has an annual production capacity of 1.5 million metric tons and employs more than 700 workers, underscoring the scale of the operation where the accident occurred.
The fatalities were confirmed after a rescue effort that lasted a little more than five hours from the time of the collapse to the recovery of the miners. Earlier official updates had said four people were trapped, and the later notice established that none survived. Authorities did not immediately publish the names of the dead or provide further details about the exact section of the mine that was affected, and no other injuries were reported in the official information released by Thursday morning.
Rescue Timeline Clarified Overnight
The accident was described by authorities as a roof collapse, a type of underground mining accident in which material above a work area gives way and can block access routes. In the brief official accounts released after the recovery, officials did not say what triggered the collapse or whether production at the mine had been halted. No public statement reviewed on Thursday set out a cause, and there was no immediate indication that any additional workers remained missing underground.
The mine’s operator has been described in company material as part of the China National Coal Group system in Shanxi. Company information cited in public reports says the operation holds valid mining and safety production licenses and received a 1.5 million ton annual safety production permit in January 2024. The same company material places the mine in Dongpo village in Weifen town, Xingxian, and says the workforce exceeds 700 employees at the site.
Mine Operator Details Emerge
Wednesday night’s accident unfolded in two stages of public reporting, with an initial notice saying four people were trapped and a later update confirming that all four had died. The short sequence reflected the pace of the overnight rescue operation, with officials releasing only basic information while recovery work continued. By Thursday afternoon, no expanded official account had been made public beyond the timing of the collapse, the location of the mine and the confirmed death toll.
The deaths in Xingxian left a final toll of four in an underground coal mine accident in northern China. The official timeline placed less than six hours between the first report of the collapse and the recovery of the miners, ending the rescue before dawn on Thursday. Authorities had not, by the latest public updates reviewed, announced the cause of the collapse or released personal details about the victims. – By Content Syndication Services.
