Skip links

Skip to Content
play

Live

Navigation menu

  • News
    • Middle East
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • US & Canada
    • Latin America
    • Europe
    • Asia Pacific
  • Ukraine war
  • Features
  • Economy
  • Opinion
  • Video
    • Coronavirus
    • Climate Crisis
    • Investigations
    • Interactives
    • In Pictures
    • Science & Technology
    • Sports
    • Podcasts
play

Live

In Pictures

Gallery|Mining

Mexico’s coal miners risk their lives to earn a living

Miners know the risks of working dozens of metres below ground but still work to extract coal to support their families.

Mexico miners
Miner Juan Briones, 35, walks through the entrance of a coal mine, in Sabinas, Mexico. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Published On 3 Oct 20223 Oct 2022
facebooktwitterwhatsapp

Every time Juan Briones descends deep into the ground to dig for coal in northern Mexico’s Coahuila state, he knows he has to balance earning a living and avoiding death.

Miners know the risks, Briones said, but often feel they have no choice in their town of Sabinas in Coahuila, where jobs are scarce. There are few options that can match the roughly $150 he takes home a week.

“You have the need to survive, to take care of your family,” the 35-year-old said in a recent interview at his home after his wife helped him scrub off the black dust that had settled into his skin after a day in a sweltering mine. The couple has four sons, aged six, eight, 10 and 15.

When he first descends, he sometimes feels as if he can’t breathe. He emerges at the end of the day, drenched in sweat.

In August, his brother-in-law Hugo Tijerina was one of 10 miners trapped in the nearby coal mine of El Pinabete as water broke through a shaft wall and flooded the tunnels the men were working in. Nearly two months later, their bodies have still not been recovered.

Even before the El Pinabete mine disaster, he urged his eldest, who has left school, to avoid the risky work to which he has dedicated the past two decades of his life.

Mexico miners
Juan Briones, centre, 35, waits with other miners for transportation to work in a coal mine, in Sabinas, Mexico. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]

“It’s a really tough job, especially because of the accidents,” he said. “I didn’t want the same thing to happen to him, where he goes to work in the mines with the risks.”

Briones, who began in the mines when he was just 14, works dozens of metres below ground with a helmet, gloves and steel-toed boots for protection, on alert for tumbling rocks, faulty pulleys, toxic gas and underground flooding.

His brother-in-law had encouraged him to work at El Pinabete but he turned it down, saying he feared that giant pools of water in abandoned mines nearby could break through and flood it – which is just what happened on August 3 when excavation work caused a tunnel wall to collapse. Efforts to pump out the mine and rescue the miners ultimately failed.

The disaster highlighted the dangers workers endure at small, unregulated mines in Mexico’s coal heartland where people like Briones are hired informally and paid in cash to extract coal that formed in the earth in the Cretaceous period millions of years ago.

El Pinabete, one of the many Coahuila mines tapped to provide coal to Mexico’s state power utility, had not been visited by labour inspectors, Reuters reported last month. Mexican law does not require such mines to be inspected before opening.

It was not the first tragedy at a Coahuila mine. In 2006, an explosion at the Pasta de Conchos mine killed 65 men. Only two bodies were recovered.

mexico miners
Juan Briones smokes a cigarette after ending his shift. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]

Briones’ taut, lean frame belies the strength he has, which allows him to work up to eight hours a day, wielding a pneumatic air gun to blast the rock and a shovel and cart to lug coal through underground tunnels.

He can earn 2,700 pesos ($135) hoisting 18 tonnes of coal above ground a week. The pay rises to 3,300 pesos ($165) if he can deliver an extra two tonnes – an incentive to push his body harder and faster.

He trades playful barbs with fellow workers to make the hours pass faster. Still, he stays alert for dangers. As he goes down into the darkness he thinks of his wife’s brother and the other nine who never returned.

“You’re always scared of not coming back,” Briones said. “When I’m working, down below, I remember all of them.”

Mexico miners
Juan Briones looks on during his shift inside the coal mine. On August 3, Briones' brother-in-law was one of 10 miners trapped in the nearby coal mine of El Pinabete as water broke through a shaft wall and flooded the tunnels the men were working in. Nearly two months later, their bodies have still not been recovered. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Advertisement
Mexico miners
Miguel Angel Robles, 25, helps Juan Antonio Bartolo, 33, while they work inside the mine. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Miners can work dozens of metres below ground with a helmet, gloves and steel-toed boots for protection, on alert for tumbling rocks, faulty pulleys, toxic gas and underground flooding. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Miners wait to descend into the coal mine. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Miner Ismael Maldonado, centre, 32, waits near the entrance of the coal mine before starting his shift. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Juan Briones checks his air drill before the starting shift in the coal mine. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Advertisement
Mexico miners
Miguel Tarango, 43, and Juan Briones work together to fix an air drill at the coal mine. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
A miner walks away from the entrance of the coal mine after his shift ends. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Juan Briones rests after his shift. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]
Mexico miners
Miners stand on a pile of coal during their shift at the coal mine. [Daniel Becerril/Reuters]


    • About Us
    • Code of Ethics
    • Terms and Conditions
    • EU/EEA Regulatory Notice
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Cookie Preferences
    • Sitemap
    • Community Guidelines
    • Work for us
    • HR Quality
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise with us
    • Apps
    • Channel Finder
    • TV Schedule
    • Podcasts
    • Submit a Tip
    • Al Jazeera Arabic
    • Al Jazeera English
    • Al Jazeera Investigative Unit
    • Al Jazeera Mubasher
    • Al Jazeera Documentary
    • Al Jazeera Balkans
    • AJ+
    • Al Jazeera Centre for Studies
    • Al Jazeera Media Institute
    • Learn Arabic
    • Al Jazeera Centre for Public Liberties & Human Rights
    • Al Jazeera Forum
    • Al Jazeera Hotel Partners

Follow Al Jazeera English:

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • youtube
  • instagram-colored-outline
  • rss
Al Jazeera Media Network logo
© 2023 Al Jazeera Media Network