Dhori Area is one of the operational areas of the Central Coalfields Limited located mainly in the Bokaro district in the state of Jharkhand, India.
Location | |
---|---|
Location | East Bokaro Coalfield |
Coordinates | 23°46′01″N 85°59′07″E / 23.766978°N 85.985389°E |
Owner | |
Company | Central Coalfields Limited |
Website | centralcoalfields |
The projects of the Dhori Area are: Amlo opencast, Dhori open cast, Selected Dhori Quarry No. I open cast, Selected Dhori Quarry No. III open cast, New Selected Dhori underground, Dhori Khas underground. The area office is at Dhori, PO Dhori 825102. [1]
Mining activity
edit5miles
River
River
Dam
Mines and projects
editAmlo Open Cast Project has an annual capacity of 3.0 million tonnes per year.[2]
Selected Dhori Group of Mines: The mine is operational and proposed for production capacity expansion from 2.25 million tonnes per year to 8.25 million tonnes per year (nominal) and 11.0 million tonnes per year (peak).[3]
Dhori colliery accident
editOne of the biggest disasters in the history of coal mining took place at Dhori colliery at about 1 AM on 28 May 1965. The death of 268 persons in the accident is the highest number of deaths in an explosion in India.[4]
Dhori colliery in the East Bokaro Coalfield was owned, at the time of accident, by Bokaro and Ramgarh Limited. Amlo, Upper Kargali, Lower Kargali, Bermo and Karo group of seams (including Phusro seam) were present in Dhori colliery. At the time of accident, only the Bermo seam was being worked. Although the Upper Kargali seam was known to be a gassy seam, the colliery as a whole was treated as non-gassy. Hurricane lanterns were used in the mine and it did not have any mechanical ventilation.[4]
There were alternative theories about the cause of the accident. The Court of Enquiry accepted the proposition that the accident was caused by the entry of a coal miner carrying a lantern into a gassy zone. The management theory of a sabotage was not accepted by the court. The observations and strictures of the Court of Enquiry lead to long standing changes in mining practices that have made mines safer.[4]
See also: 1965 Dhanbad coal mine disaster
Educational facilities for employees’ children
editCentral Coalfields Limited provides support for reputed institutions/ trusts for setting up 10+2 pattern CBSE schools for children of CCL employees. It provides 109 buses to employees’ children to schools and back. Among the schools in the East Bokaro Coalfield that receive financial help or structural support are: DAV Dhori, DAV Swang, DAV Kathara.[5]
Medical facilities
editIn the East Bokaro Coalfield, CCL has the following facilities: Central Hospital Dhori at Dhori with 50 beds has 7 general duty medical officers and 3 specialists. Among the facilities it has are audiometer, spirometer, I.C.U. It has 4 ambulances.[6]
Regional Hospital at Kargali with 60 beds has 3 general duty medical officers and 3 specialists. Among the facilities it has are surgical and eye equipment. It has 2 ambulances.[6]
Bokaro Colliery Hospital at Bermo with 48 beds has 2 general duty medical officers. It has facilities for routine tests.[6]
Kathara Hospital at Kathara with 35 beds has 4 general duty medical officers. Among the facilities it has are X‐ray, ECG, auto analyser. It has 2 ambulances.[6]
Swang Hospital at Swang functions with 11 beds.[6]
Jarangdih Hospital at Jaragdih functions with 11 beds.[6]
There are central facilities in the Central Hospital, Gandhinagar at Kanke Road, Ranchi with 250 beds and in the Central Hospital, Naisarai at Ramgarh with 150 beds.[6]
There are dispensaries at Gobindpur in the Kathara Area, Karo I/ Jawahar Nagar, AAK OCP/ KMP in the Bokaro & Kargali Area and Central Colony and Kalyani in the Dhori Area.[7]
References
edit- ^ "Central Coalfields Limited". Areas – Dhori. CCL. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ "Environment Statement for Amlo Opencast Project 2013-14" (PDF). Central Coalfields Limited. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ "Updated Form I for Selected Dhori Group of Mines" (PDF). Central Mine Planning and Design Institute Ltd. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ a b c "Envis Centre of Environment Problems of Mining". ISM-Envis. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ "Educational facilities". CCL. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Status report of existing patient care facility in CCL" (PDF). CCL. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
- ^ "Status of Dispensaries" (PDF). CCL. Retrieved 12 February 2021.