The Role of Applied Biotechnology in Decommissioning Mining Operations

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Margarete Kalin
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
15
File Size:
493 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

"Biotechnological approaches to decommissioning of mine waste management areas are presented in the context of sustainable environmental management. Improved design of waste sites and environmental management paves the way for the application of new technological approaches. Mining wastes are better confined, effluent quantity is reduced and the quality is expected to improve in the future. The biologically mediated treatments focus on the creation of conditions inside the waste management area which lead to the confinement of the contaminants in the inactive tailings ponds and seepage collection ponds, as well as pits or other disturbed areas which were part of the operating conditions.Biogeochemical reactions lead to three fundamental water treatment steps mediated biogeochemically , alterations in chemistry which lead to formation of particles, which then have to flocculate and be assisted to collect in the bottom of the ponds. Microbially active sediments are installed to assist particulate formation and serve as sinks for metals. In deeper sediment strata, stable forms of metals are created. Biological polishing is used to collect the particulates and relegate them to the sediment. Examples will be given of the application of these processes, to waste rock piles, open pits and tailings ponds. This paper attempts to show that, through the integration of applied biotechnological advances and the application of new approaches to decommissioning, reductions of environmental impacts by mining are possible. * Note: this paper has been presented at the 13th Annual Meeting of BIOMINETIntroductionThe role of biotechnology in decommissioning of mining waste management areas should be placed in the context of sustainable development. The concept of sustainable development as defined by the Brundtland Commission (1987) for the restoration/ reclamation of mining operations could be translated as follows: The increasing demand for the resources by the world population must be met in a manner which does not compromise the earth's environment over the long term (Brooks et al., 1995)."
Citation

APA: Margarete Kalin  (1998)  The Role of Applied Biotechnology in Decommissioning Mining Operations

MLA: Margarete Kalin The Role of Applied Biotechnology in Decommissioning Mining Operations. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1998.

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