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Cleaning up Australia's 80,000 disused mines is a huge job—but the payoffs can outweigh the costs
Newly announced closures of Glencore's copper and zinc mines in Mt Isa will add to a huge number of former mines in Australia. A 2020 study by Monash University's Resources Trinity Group found more than 80,000 inactive mine sites across the country.
Globally, a 2023 study estimates the mining footprint at around 66,000 square kilometers. Abandoned mines account for much of this area.
It's estimated the US has about 500,000 abandoned mines and Canada at least 10,000. The UK and China have at least 1,500 and 12,000 old coalmines, respectively.
Land is a scarce resource. Restoration enables sustainable and dynamic use of former mining land. It opens up golden opportunities—environmental, social and economic.
Environmental benefits:
Carbon farming
Mine leases generally lock up vast land areas. This land presents a commercially viable, yet neglected, opportunity for carbon farming.
Green Gravity uses a system of weights in a mine shaft to store energy from renewable sources. This energy is used to raise the weights. The energy can later be released when the weights are lowered under the pull of gravity.
Another example is the former Kidston gold mine's pumped storage hydro project. This system uses two water reservoirs in former open pits. Renewable energy is used to pump water into the higher reservoir. Releasing this water into the lower reservoir generates hydropower energy as needed.
For abandoned deeper mines, tapping into geothermal energy could even make it viable to resume mining.
Another option is renaturalisation. This depends heavily, though, on location and mine type.
For example, Indonesia has plans to restore forest on former mine sites to help reduce floods. These reforested areas will help retain floodwaters.
Biodiversity restoration
Nature-based approaches to mine rehabilitation include reforestation and phytoremediation, which uses plants to clean up contaminated environments. These approaches tackle mines' legacy of pollution and add ecological value.
Restored land allows for native species to be reintroduced. It can also provide bridges between patches of habitat to enhance biodiversity. In Victoria, this has been done with a former quarry at Royal Botanic Gardens Cranbourne.
Social benefits:
Improving urban liveability
Renaturalised mines can be valuable communal and green spaces. Particularly when done in urban areas, it can provide residents with better air quality, microclimates and quality of life as these sites support recreational and cultural activities. All Nations Park is another example of a quarry restoration just seven kilometers from the Melbourne CBD.
Critical minerals are vital for batteries, electric vehicles and electrification needs. These minerals can be extracted from inactive mines and tailings storages.
Several large regions in Australia, including the Pilbara and Bowen Basins, face similar rehabilitation challenges. But each company is responsible for its own mine closure and rehabilitation. Current mining business models are not well suited for rehabilitation.
However, the scale of the rehabilitation work required in a major mining region would support an entire regional industry. It could provide many local jobs after mines close.
There are synergies between the many uses of restored mine sites. For example, Royal Botanic Gardens Cranbourne not only restores biodiversity, but has also created an attractive space for people to gather, along with jobs and education opportunities.
So what are the obstacles?
A mine's rehabilitation costs may total hundreds of millions of dollars. These costs are often many times greater than what governments hold in rehabilitation bonds, which operators must provide as financial security before mining begins. Nevertheless, the financial and environmental consequences of inaction dwarf such costs.
Globally, the costs of mine rehabilitation and closure liabilities run into billions of dollars. However, investments in green infrastructure have reached trillions of dollars. Some of these funds could be directed into rehabilitation and clean-up efforts, with the benefits of:
providing capital to "kick off" and refine the collaborative work needed to deliver multiple benefits—as well as mining companies, this work involves many other organizations and individuals
creating clear financial accountability for rehabilitation
generating business opportunities and sites for testing new sustainability practices and developing "gold standards" for restoring and repurposing mine sites.
A co-operative investment approach enables all partners to understand their shared responsibilities before any long-term expenses affect them individually.
Strong governance, initial funding and collaborative development are needed to achieve environmental, social and economic outcomes that add value to mine rehabilitation.
Citation:
Cleaning up Australia's 80,000 disused mines is a huge job—but the payoffs can outweigh the costs (2023, October 23)
retrieved 23 October 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-10-australia-disused-huge-jobbut-payoffs.html
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