Cobalt, copper tailings and the circular economy – a case study from the Capricorn Copper Mine, north-west Queensland minerals province

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 1189 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 2, 2023
Abstract
Reprocessing Queensland’s historical copper tailings for critical minerals is an opportunity to circularise the state’s mining industry by converting waste liabilities into assets. Mine waste valorisation enables economic rehabilitation of legacy mining sites, improves environmental outcomes, and can establish a secondary resources sector that produces a sustainable supply of critical minerals to supplement growing global demands (Australian Government, 2023). The North-West Queensland Minerals Province (NWQMP) hosts numerous copper mines with known cobalt mineralisation (Degeling, 2020). Cobalt is a critical metal essential for green energy and battery technologies, however its global supply is at risk due to geopolitical and ethical concerns (Rachidi et al, 2021). Historically mining in the NWQMP has focused on copper, leaving cobalt to theoretically accumulate in the mine waste. First-pass geometallurgical characterisation of waste repositories by the Sustainable Minerals Institute identified Capricorn Copper as a key site for further investigation into cobalt deportment and recovery potential.
Citation
APA:
(2023) Cobalt, copper tailings and the circular economy – a case study from the Capricorn Copper Mine, north-west Queensland minerals provinceMLA: Cobalt, copper tailings and the circular economy – a case study from the Capricorn Copper Mine, north-west Queensland minerals province. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2023.