A coal miner dies in a crash on a dark highway. The truck was loaded, the road was wet, and the driver was exhausted. It feels like a simple mistake. But a new review says the real problem is bigger than one person’s choice.
Coal mining has long focused on hazards underground. Explosions, roof falls, and equipment failures get the most attention. Yet many serious injuries and deaths now happen above ground—on roads, rails, and loading docks. The supply chain is complex, and the risks are connected.
This review looked at 68 studies from 2004 to 2025. It mapped how hazards in coal transport, handling, and storage interact. The goal was to move past isolated fixes and see the whole system.
Why does this matter now? Coal logistics is a massive global operation. Millions of tons move by truck, rail, and conveyor each year. Workers face long hours, tight deadlines, and changing weather. When safety focuses only on machines, people can get left behind.
Here’s the twist: the study found that most accidents are not caused by broken gear. They’re caused by human and organizational stress. That means the solution isn’t just better machines—it’s better systems that support workers.
Think of a coal logistics system like a relay race. Each handoff—mining, transport, storage—must be smooth. If one runner is tired or the baton is slippery, the whole team loses. The review shows that “unsafe acts” are often symptoms of a tired runner, not a clumsy one.
The researchers used a method called PRISMA 2020. This is a standard checklist for reviewing studies. They searched peer-reviewed articles and grouped risks into themes. The goal was to find patterns, not just isolated stories.
Most of the research came from China—about two-thirds of the studies. That shapes the findings. China often uses top-down safety systems and smart automation. That approach works in some places but may need changes elsewhere.
What did the review find? Human and organizational factors made up 51% of risks. Mechanical and operational failures were 31%. Environmental and geological hazards were 18%. In plain terms: people and processes matter more than machines.
The review challenges a common belief. It says accidents aren’t just caused by individual negligence. Instead, they often reflect deeper problems. Excessive workload, poor communication, and psychosocial stress can push workers into risky choices.
But there’s a catch. Technical hazards still exist. Conveyor belts can drift. Coal can self-ignite. These dangers are real and universal. Yet the best prevention mixes engineering fixes with human-centered systems.
One key insight is that risk management must fit the local context. A safety rule that works in one country may fail in another. Regulations, culture, and technology all matter. The review calls for systemic adaptation, not copy-paste solutions.
What does this mean for you? If you work in coal logistics, talk with your team about stress and workload. If you manage safety, look beyond checklists. Ask how shifts, schedules, and communication affect decisions on the ground.
This doesn’t mean this approach is already in place everywhere.
Experts in the field say the shift from behavioral compliance to systemic resilience is overdue. They argue that safety should be built into the design of work, not just enforced after accidents happen. The review supports that view.
Limitations are clear. The studies are mostly from one region. Some were observational. Causation can be hard to prove. But the pattern is consistent across many reports.
What happens next? The review calls for more research in other regions. It also urges companies to test integrated safety strategies. That means combining better machines with better support for workers. Progress will take time, but the path is clearer now.