All five miners found dead after Chilean mine collapse

Mr. Jindal
2 Min Read

Relatives of Alex Araya Acevedo, a 29-year-old miner who died in El Teniente mine of Chilean state-run copper producer Codelco, gather outside Codelco’s offices to demand information about the delivery of his body, which has been delayed, after the regional prosecutor confirmed that all trapped miners have been found dead, in Rancagua, Chile on August 3, 2025.

Relatives of Alex Araya Acevedo, a 29-year-old miner who died in El Teniente mine of Chilean state-run copper producer Codelco, gather outside Codelco’s offices to demand information about the delivery of his body, which has been delayed, after the regional prosecutor confirmed that all trapped miners have been found dead, in Rancagua, Chile on August 3, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

A rescue operation in Chile at the world’s largest underground copper mine ended Sunday (August 3, 2025) with no survivors, as the body of a fifth missing miner was found days after a tunnel collapsed, officials said.

“Today we finally found [dead] the last of the missing workers,” Aquiles Cubillos, prosecutor for Chile’s O’Higgins region, told reporters.

Operations at the El Teniente mining center had been suspended since Friday after a “seismic event” caused the collapse of a tunnel the day before, trapping the five miners inside.

Whether the cause of the shaking was due to an earthquake or drilling remains under investigation.

El Teniente, which is operated by the Chilean state-owned mining firm Codelco, boasts more than 4,500 kilometers (2,800 miles) of tunnels and is the largest underground copper deposit in the world.

Last year, it produced 356,000 metric tonnes (over 392,000 tons) of copper — nearly seven percent of the total for Chile.

Chile’s mining industry is considered among the safest in the world, with a fatality rate of 0.02 percent in 2024, according to the National Geology and Mining Service of Chile.

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