Mine Closure.pdf
Transcript of Mine Closure.pdf
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Mine Closure
1 Introduction and Basic ConceptsIntroduction
What This Course is About
In theory, mine closure is simple; in practice, it is difficult. In this course, we will start with the
simple and then move to the more difficult, which will be explained in terms that will enable
you to deal with the many issues that arise as you plan and implement mine closure.
The simple part of mine closure consists of three objectives:
remove equipment and structures;
stabilize waste piles; and control the spread of pollutants from the closed site.
As we shall see, these three simple objectives quickly give rise to many questions and knotty
issues.
Who pays?
Who says enough is enough?
What is to become of the site in the long term?
Many more related and difficult issues arise. Reading only this course will not enable you to
solve all the problems. Each mine site is unique and demands a unique closure plan andapproach. You will undoubtedly have to formulate the specifics of the closure plan for your
mine by way of many studies, meetings, reports, and deep deliberations. This course will
attempt to set down the current state of ideas, practice, and possibilities, so that you are
empowered to move forward to success as part of a team charged with mine closure.
Personal Perspectives
I write this course from a personal perspective based on many years of
involvement in designing, helping operate, and closing mines and mine
facilities, particularly tailings impoundments. For five years I was
actively involved in the engineering of a major US project to close
twenty-four uranium mill tailings impoundments. That experience
gave me the opportunity to think deeply about the issues of mine
closure. In addition to an active consulting job, I have spent the past
five years reading and writing about all aspects of mines and mining.
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Thus, I prepare this course as an introduction to a subject that is vast and sprawling, involving
social, technical, and financial issues. In the final section of this course I list and comment on
many e-documents readily available on the web, and likely to remain available over time. I
recommend these for your perusal once you have made your way through this course. For the
most part, I purposely avoid providing links in the body of the course. Links break, go out of
date, and are superceeded by new information and comment. Thus if a topic, idea, or specificsite mentioned in the body of the course interests you, simply undertake a Google search and
you will undoubtedly find more information related to it.
Be advised that the science, art, or philosophy of mine closure is still in a state of flux. There are
no generally accepted or implemented standards or procedures in any aspect of mine closure.
There is considerable debate about all of them, and in particular about closure standards, post-
closure site use, funding for closure, and the social responsibility of the mining company in the
event of premature and even final closure of a mine.
For Whom is this Course Written?
Many people and many disciplines are needed to successfully plan and implement mine
closure. Here are some, in alphabetical order. This course is intended to introduce all of the
following to mine closure concepts and practice and to help them better close mines.
Accountantsand financial folk are going to have to find the money to pay for closure. Good
accountants will make adequate provision for closure costs starting at the beginning of mine
life. Bad accountants will postpone the inevitable, and then very skilled accountants are
needed to find money in a non-profit-generating company.
Backwoodsmenand all the people who love and enjoy nature want to see the site returned
its natural state so they may go hunting, fishing, riding, camping and dreaming in an area free
of human intervention. These folk may be the locals, the community, the ancient owners of
the site, or they may be fleeing the city for nature and a bit of peace.
Civil engineers and other engineers have to design, construct, and ultimately maintain the
civil works that are part of a well-executed mine closure. Ironically, closure of a worked-out
mine is primarily a great civil engineering undertaking. The mining engineers have generally
moved on to a new mine to extract more coal, gold, silver, and other metals and minerals on
which society depends for its wellbeing. The civil engineer is left behind to clean up and
make the landscape stable.
Designerswill have to formulate the closure landscape, locate the mounds and berms, set
the courses for new streams and wetlands, specify where the vegetation will go and hence
formulate a natural-like landscape. This has been done at the Wapisaw Lookout site, the first
closed oil sands tailings impoundment in Fort McMurray, Alberta.
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Environmentalistsare the highly trained specialists who have to compile the environmental
studies and write the closure environmental impact statements to justify the chosen closure
approach. Included in this group of specialists are the risk assessors, the health and safety
specialists, the vegetation folk who have to make grass and trees grow where they would not
naturally do so, and so on.
Fish and fowl specialistshave to decide how best to reclaim the site so that fish and fowl are
not affected, and may even come to once again inhabit the site.
Geologists and geomorphologists define the geology of the site and surrounding region so
that we may apply the best principles of science to make a site stable in the long term.
Geomorphologists are key to successful mine closure, for if we do not invoke and emulate
natural geomorphic processes, we will soon be back to re-close the site.
Hydrologistsand other hydro folk deal with water from the time it falls as rain to when it runs
across the surface, infiltrates to groundwater, and becomes polluted at ill-closed mines.
Inspectorsmust come to check on closure construction works and confirm that the site is
performing as intended in the many years after closure.
Journalistswill have to be kept informed, and are charged with writing about closure in a
responsible manner so as to keep the public informed and hopefully supportive of closure
operations.
Knowledgeable NGOs will have opinions, arguments, and rationalizations for ever-more-
expensive solutions. It is best to know them, communicate with them, and reach a
compromise wherever possible.
Lawyers find and interpret the rules and regulations and tell us how they affect closure
planning and construction now and in the long-term future.
Miners involved include the mine planners, the mine managers, the mine community
relations staff charged with dealing with affected local communities, and the mine engineers
and technical staff who undertake the hard work of physically closing the mine and
constructing the necessary closure works.
Managersof all types and levels of authority manage the many teams that will plan, design,approve, and implement mine closure works.
Native peoplesare those who feel a claim to the site; the length of time they have been in
the area will vary. They may have a treaty from the Crown, a legal title, or they may be the
possessors of the land around the mine. Whatever the case, you should deal with them, for
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they will be there when you are long gone.
Operations technicians will be required to do the hands-on work at the site - from
groundwater well monitoring to control of water treatment plants.
Permitting specialists will have their hands full identifying the many permits that have to be
obtained to proceed. Theirs is a job of patience, skill, and necessity; for every mine being
closed is sure to be where many permits are required to do everything from digging and
planting to diverting streams and rivers.
Quality control and quality assurance practitionersmust make sure we do what we say we
will do and that we do it in accordance with pre-formulated plans and procedures.
Regulatorshave the most difficult job of all: make sure the closure works are done properly,
for if they fail, you can be sure the taxpayer will end up paying in the long term.
Specialists in disciplines too many to list will be involved, from the anthropologist to the
zoologist - you will be introduced to most of them as you proceed through this course.
Treatment specialists include those who design, build, and operate the water treatment
plants that are so often needed to clean-up polluted runoff and seepage from the closed
mine site. This ensures that downstream waters are not contaminated but instead return to
pristine conditions where wildlife may once again flourish.
Underground minersplan closure of the underground mine workings so that they are not
accessible in the long-term, so that they do not subside to disrupt the surface, and so that
they do not become a source of polluted water.
Visionarieslook into the future to tell us what may occur so that we may choose to provide
for postulated future events or to leave those problems to future generations. In this
category fall those advocates of global warming who are even now demanding more and
more of mine closure works to deal with speculated global warming scenarios of serious
proportions.
Workers of all types and skills will come with the contractors to demolish old buildings,
remove equipment, regrade slopes, and construct surface water management structures.
X, Y, and Zstand in for all the rest who we will meet in this course, from labor union bosses to
capitalists seeking to develop wind farms, from bloggers (like me) to zealots of all
persuasions; and do not forget the politicians, without whom nothing would succeed in
difficult circumstances.
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From this list we can quickly see that mine closure is multi-disciplinary
and demanding. The success of mine closure depends on how these
diverse skills and talents are brought together to form a whole, and to
cost-effectively do what has to be done. This course is intended to set
out some of the things the team will have to consider, plan for, and act
on.
Why Mines Close
Why do mines close?Laurence (2006),notes the following reasons.
economic, due to either low commodity prices or high operating costs
geologic, due, for example, to an unanticipated decrease in grade or
size of the orebody
technical, due to adverse geotechnical conditions or mechanical or
equipment failure
regulatory, due to safety or environmental breaches
policy changes, which occur from time to time, particularly when governments change
social or community pressures, particularly from NGOs
closure of downstream industries or markets
flooding or inrush of groundwater
Closed mines may sometimes reopen when the metal price increases - consider recent
increases in the price of gold and copper. More intelligent exploration may lead to the
discovery of additional ore. The technical issues may be solved and the regulators placated.
Social pressures may change as those who formerly earned a good mining income are faced
with unemployment and hard times. And so on. It is worthwhile to consider the possibility of
re-opening the mine in future while planning its closure.
Basic Technical Concepts and Issues
General
Now that we have a basic idea of the people involved in mine closure and we understand why
mines may close, we can set down the basic issues that arise in planning and undertaking mine
closure. In the remainder of this course we will explore each of these issues in some detail, so
consider the following an introduction to the remainder of this course and its contents.
Closure Standards
The laws and regulations that govern mine closure vary from place to place. Clearly you have to
obey the law. But laws and regulations are seldom such that they mandate simple and obvious
closure design criteria and standards. In a separate section of this course, we will explore the
great diversity of mine closure criteria derived from laws, regulations, and current practice.
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Tread carefully in establishing clear and unequivocal closure criteria - but you must do it,
otherwise you are embarking on a never-ending trek of ever-increasing demands to do more
and more. In establishing mine closure criteria and in planning their practical implementation,
you need a concept of the post-closure use of your mine site.
Post-Closure Land Use
The mine on which I grew up closed after nearly fifty years of operation. Now the site is covered
with buildings where artificial diamonds are manufactured. A mine for which I designed the
tailings impoundment closed after twelve years of profitable operation. Now the old buildings
house horse stables and the impoundment is part of the area where people go horseback riding
in the clean air and rugged mountains. Some old mines become museums, some are turned
into nurseries producing baby plants for new forests and farms, and some become schools or
religious retreats.
Too many closed mines are a burden, and are surrounded by high fences to keep trespassers
out. It need not be thus, and in this course we will explore innovative ideas for post-closure use
of the mine site.
Phases of Mine Closure Planning
In the past, mine closure planning was undertaken as the mine approached closure, or worse,
once it closed sooner than intended. Mine closure implementation was undertaken once the
mine shut down and mining operation ceased.
In more and more jurisdictions, laws and regulations require that you prepare a mine closure
plan as part of the basic process of evaluating the feasibility of opening a new mine and seeking
mining permits. Some jurisdictions mandate regular updates of the mine closure plan during
mining operations. Many jurisdictions now require posting of a bond or other form of financial
security equal to the estimated cost of mine closure.
Therefore, prudent and comprehensive mine closure planning now should occur at all stages of
mine planning and operation. Depending on how you break up the phases of mining, it all boils
down to consideration of mine closure engineering and financing as you evaluate the feasibility
of the mine, proceed to detailed studies, open the mine, operate the mine, and approach
closure.
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Thinking through mine closure as part of initial mine evaluation and planning has led to the
concept of designing and operating the mine for closure - namely doing things from the very
start in such a way as to make it easier and less costly to close the mine when mining
operations cease. We shall discuss this issue in more detail as we proceed with the course.
The Mine Closure Plan
It is never too late to prepare a plan to close your mine. Most existing mines do not have a
closure plan. The mine may have been in operation for many years and may have so long a
remaining life that the idea of planning for closure is not an issue. Most mines begin operation
well before the idea of preparing a mine closure plan as part of the mine's feasibility study,
became necessary or fashionable.
In recent times, however, the following and other realities have led to an increase in the early
preparation of mine closure plans.
An increasing number of jurisdictions have begun to demand a closure plan as part of an
application to start mining.
Shareholders have grown wary of the ever-increasing costs of mine closure and the impact of
these costs on the profitability of the mining company. Prudent investors now seek information
on the closure cost liabilities of a company in which they are considering investing.
Taxpayers, burdened with the enormous costs of closing mines that have been abandoned by
their owners, now demand that provision be made for bonds and other financial provision to be
made, at the expense of the mining company, to close the mine.
There is an increasing demand that mines prepare mine closure plans as part of the initial
evaluation of the feasibility of the mine, part of the permitting process, part of ongoing
operation, and of course as actual mine closure approaches. In later sections of this course we
will consider the contents of a mine closure plan.
Financing Mine Closure
Somebody has to pay to close the mine. Real dollars will have to be expended to pay the
consultants, the contractors, and the mining company staff who will plan, manage, and
implement closure. The issue is: where is this money to come from? If your mining company is
large and successful, with other profitable mines, then you may simply draw on the overall
company profits (reducing them, of course.) But if you work for a small company and the mine
about to be closed is the company's sole or major resource, you may be severely cash-strapped.You may find yourself asking:
Should you have provided a nest egg for closure?
Can you draw on closure insurance?
Should you go bankrupt and pass the cost to the taxpayer?
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If you are the regulator of a new mine about to go into production, should you demand an up-
front closure bond equal to the estimated cost of future closure?
Engineering and Technical Approaches
There is an enormous body of engineering and technical literature onthe details of mine closure. How do you select rock that will endure for
the planned mine closure life? How do you regrade the site to resist
erosion and subsequent geomorphic change? What vegetation should
be planted, and how will this vegetation be replaced naturally by the
climax vegetation of the region? This is where the specialists come in.
In this course, we will not make you an engineering or technical expert
in any of these areas, but we will set out the basics and the standards
of practice that have been used at other closed mine sites.
Social Issues
Mines have been opening and closing for thousands of years. Some mines have opened, closed,
opened, and closed a number of times as the price of gold, platinum, or silver has fluctuated
along with economic fortune.
Like taxes and death, mine closure is inevitable. People have flowed to new
mines and left when the mines were forced into temporary closure or the
resources were totally depleted. Temporary or premature closure is perhaps
hardest on local communities: there is, so to speak, no final closure and lives
and careers may be put on hold in the hope of the mine reopening. Folk
working on and dependent on the mine in the event of mine closure are always asking: will themine reopen? When will it start up again? And, should we stay or go? This is true if the mine is
"temporarily" shut because of either a prolonged strike or a genuine fall in commodity prices.
On permanent, final mine closure, people know and can plan and act with some degree of
certainty. Most will move to new jobs, new mines, or new cities. Hopefully there will be other
sources of employment in the area and they can do what we would all rather do: stay in their
homes, keep the kids in the same schools, and continue to be part of an established community
of friends and family.
In all instances in which a mine closes, temporarily or permanently, the mining company has alarge obligation to those affected and we discuss this in some detail in later sections of this
course.
It is not reasonable to demand that every closing mine leave behind a thriving industrial base. It
is reasonable to demand that every closing mine leave behind a landscape where people may
continue to live if they so choose - even if the money to live in the selected place comes from far
away. In this course, we recognize the social implications of mine closure and the moral
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imperative that the mine provide assistance and guidance to those left behind. So we will spend
some time in later sections of this course on the issues of social interaction, sustainable mining,
and the community relations techniques that are part of mine opening, operation, and closure.
I base my approach to the social dimension of mine closure and the mining company's
obligations in that regard on the following.
It is good business practice for a mining company to do the right thing in regards to
social obligations when it closes a mine.
It is the right and moral thing to do to look to social justice when closing a mine - hence
society is well within its rights to demand by way of law, regulation, and contract that a
mine prepare for and implement its social obligations on mine closure.
Most mining companies will not be able to pay for the social aspects of mine closure
mitigation. Thus, society must demand and secure performance bonds adequate to
cover the costs of those aspects of mine closure and its impacts.
2 Types of Laws and Regulations
General
This section looks at some of the many laws, regulations, and
standards that govern mine closure in a number of places. The
following is not intended to be definitive or exhaustive; it simply
describes and discusses some of the laws, regulations, and standards in
order to expose you to the diversity of approach to mine closure
current in the industry.
You will have to establish what the governing laws and regulations are
that set the standard for closure of your mine. If there are no established laws and regulations
you will have to decide which, if any, laws and regulations may be potentially appropriate. Only
in extreme cases are you likely to be able to propose and implement closure standards of your
own formulation. A mine in a location where there are no set requirements for mine closure is
a mine in a distant, lawless place, and many other difficulties besides mine closure planning will
be at the forefront.
Types of Laws and Regulations
A good law, rule, or regulation (the word regulation will be used in the
remainder of this section) is easy to understand and enforce. Even
better is a regulation that does not have to be enforced: people simply
act in accordance with the spirit and letter of the regulation because it
is so obviously the sensible thing to do.
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A good regulation sets noble and achievable goals and leaves it to the person complying with
the regulation to find the best way to achieve those goals.
Regulations may be prescriptive or performance-based. For example, a prescriptive regulation
tells you to put three-feet of clay with a hydraulic conductivity of less than 10-6cm/sec as the
liner beneath your impoundment. By comparison, a performance-based regulation says:operate the impoundment so that is does not affect water quality - you prove to us that you are
protecting groundwater quality.
Prescriptive regulations inevitably fail to achieve the desired outcome. Prescriptive regulations
fail because they stifle human ingenuity and technical innovation. At worst, a prescriptive
regulation eliminates innovation and stops progress, leading to a net loss for stakeholders and
the environment.
UMTRA, INAC and Australian Standards
UMTRA
The Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) Project was undertaken
to remediate inactive uranium mill tailings piles and the remnants of
the mines and mills from which the tailings came. The sites, in excess of
about fifty, are spread across the United States from Oregon to
Pennsylvania, from Texas to the Dakotas. The Title I sites were closed by the
Federal Government as the mines had produced product for the Manhattan Project. The Title II
sites were closed by the private companies that had operated the mines to produce product for
nuclear power plants.
Closure was undertaken in accordance with a Federal law that established the following closure
criterion: the closure works are to remain stable for 1000 years, to the extent reasonably
achievable, and at any rate for 200 years.
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the engineering details that led to compliance with this
criterion were worked out and implemented. We have now been able to observe the
performance and examine the design of the closure works, which differed for Title I and Title II
sites. The following conclusions were made.
Admittedly, there is vegetation in many areas where vegetation was not anticipated. Admi
infiltration barrier is greater than was initially estimated. But there have been no observations
are susceptible to erosion, or that intrusion to or dispersal of the tailings is likely now or thr
1000 years the covers will be well-vegetated as the climax vegetation flourishes in a rocky soil
areas and covered with windblown sand in other areas.
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The UMTRA closure standards are probably the most demanding. It costs a great deal to
implement these standards, but they do lead to safe and effective closure - not walk-away
closure, however. In Grand Junction, Colorado, there is a whole group of folk who regularly
monitor the sites and undertake maintenance if required. The point is that even for such
stringent closure criteria, there is no walking away. Somebody, some organization, some
company, or the taxpayer will forever have to be there spending money to monitor andmaintain these sites.
INAC
INAC (Indian and Native Affairs Canada) is charged with closing two
mines in Canada, namely the Faro Mine and the Giant Mine. Both
represent terrible failures by the regulators and the industry in
preparing for closure. Both are costing the taxpayer infinitely more to
close than they ever generated for the country and they are about to
get only more costly. I was informed in late 2010 that a selectcommittee of experts is about to propose the following closure criteria for these two mines:
prove that closure will be effective for 100 years;
describe what will happen 1000 years after closure; and
determine what will happen if global warming results in an average four degrees of warming
post-closure.
This set of closure criteria is tantamount to adoption of the criteria that governed the Uranium
Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) Project: namely, closure to be stable for 1000 years, to
the extent reasonably achievable, and at any rate for 200 years.
In engineering practice, it is impossible to distinguish between the performances of a closed
mine after 100 versus 200 years. The implication of the 1000 years post-closure period is that
you have to provide for extreme events.
We are now going to have to "prove" to the regulators that mine closure plans for mines in the
cold parts of Canada will work and will be good for 100/200 years and for 1000 in the presence
of four degrees of warming.
Western Australia
The Western Australia Department of Mines and Petroleum and the Environmental Protection
Authority issued draft mine closure criteria in mid-2010. If adopted, these criteria will govern
mine closure in Western Australia. The basic requirements are:
reinstate natural ecosystems as similar as possible to the original ecosystem;
develop an alternative land use with higher beneficial uses than the pre-mining land use;
reinstate the pre-mining land use; and
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develop an alternative land use with other beneficial uses than the pre-mining land use.
In addition, site-specific criteria are required to:
be specific enough to reflect a unique set of environmental, social and economic
circumstances;
be flexible enough to adapt to changing circumstances without compromising
objectives;
include environmental indicators suitable for demonstrating that rehabilitation trends
are heading in the right direction;
undergo periodic review resulting in modification if required due to changed
circumstances or improved knowledge; and
be based on targeted research which results in more informed decisions.
This all sounds well and good, but is very vague and flexible. Maybe that is exactly
what is intended: provide the mining industry with the chance to select and do theright thing unencumbered by stringent regulations.
Australia
At this link is a document on mine closure put out by the Australians. Here is what they say
about mine closure.
Plan, design, operate and close operations in a manner that enhances sustainable development.
Consult with interested and affected parties in the identification, assessment and management
of all significant social, health, safety, environmental and economic impacts associated with
your activities. Inform potentially affected parties of significant risks from mining, minerals and metals
operations and of the measures that will be taken to manage the potential risks effectively.
Contribute to community development from project development through closure in
collaboration with host communities and their representatives.
State and Provicial Standards
Ontario
In Ontario the requirements for mine closure include "consideration" of four keyobjectives:
protect public health and safety;
alleviate or eliminate environmental damage;
achieve a productive use of the land, or a return to its original condition, or an acceptable
alternative; and
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to the extent achievable, provide for sustainability of social and economic benefits resulting
from mine development and operations.
In undertaking your "consideration" you are required to think of the following
issues.
Physical stability - buildings, structures, workings, pit slopes, underground openings, etc.
must be stable and not move so as to eliminate any hazard to public health and safety,
and to prevent material erosion of the terrestrial or aquatic environment. Engineered
structures must not deteriorate and fail.
Geochemical stability - minerals, metals and "other" contaminants must be stable - that
is, must not leach and/or migrate into the receiving environment at concentrations that
are harmful. Weathering, oxidation and leaching processes must not transport
contaminants, in excessive concentrations, into the environment.
Surface waters and groundwater must be protected against adverse environmental
impacts resulting from mining and processing activities.
Land use - the closed mine site should be rehabilitated to pre-mining conditions or
conditions that are compatible with the surrounding lands, or achieve an agreed-upon
alternative productive land use. Generally, the former requires the land to be
aesthetically similar to the surroundings and capable of supporting a self-sustaining
ecosystem typical of the area.
Sustainable development - elements of mine development that contribute to (impact)
the sustainability of social and economic benefit, post mining, should be maintained and
transferred to succeeding custodians.
Again, this sounds positive, but it is so vague as to be susceptible to manipulation by
lawyers and corporate interests.
Nevada
The following are from the Nevada mine closure regulations and guidance
document.
When faced with hardrock mining reclamation, including closure, the authorized officer must
ensure decisions will not result in unnecessary or undue degradation of the public lands.
All actions must comply with the appropriate federal and state laws, and be consistent with
BLM's multiple use responsibilities under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA).
Reclamation decisions need to be coordinated and made in collaboration with the state
regulatory agencies responsible for the permitting and oversight of mine reclamation, includingclosure activities.
The BLM must ensure that activities such as long-term or perpetual maintenance of vegetation
and/or wetlands, including monitoring, are provided for when these elements are part of fluid
management or site stabilization. Fence maintenance, grazing management, weed invasion or
increased salinity all impact vegetation at reclamation sites; consequently, these elements must
all be considered in the long-term planning.
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The BLM field specialists and managers need to understand and consider all the technical issues
associated with hardrock mine reclamation, including closure activities and the long-term
implications of closure, while ensuring that reclamation, including closure activities, is
conducted in a timely and effective manner.
California
All we need note about mine closure regulations in California is that they mandate backfilling of
the open pit at closure. This seems reasonable if the objective is to eliminate above-grade piles
that could erode. But backfilling of a pit is by no means a foolproof way to limit the generation
and spread of contaminants, particularly in groundwater.
Oil Sands
The Alberta Energy Resource Conservation Board (ERCB) regulation for oil sands tailings
disposal says that within one year of placement, the tailings should have a strength greater
than 5 kPa, and ultimately the strength should be greater than 10 kPa. If the strength falls
below those limits, you will have to scoop them up, take them back to the plant, and rework
them.
The underlying objective of the proposed ERCB regulations is noble: do not leave behind an oil
sands tailings impoundment that consists of a well-engineered earth dike holding back fluid
tailings. Presumably the regulators who wrote this proposed regulation want to avoid dike
failure and flow of the impounded fluid-like tailings down the Athabasca River any time in the
future.
Wisconsin Mine Reclamation
TheWisconsin Mining Information Fact Sheet: Reclamation and Long-Term Care
Requirements for Metallic Mining Sites in Wisconsinbegins as follows.
"Successful reclamation means the restoration of all areas disturbed by mining activities
including aspects of the mine itself, waste disposal areas, buildings, roads and utility
corridors. It is the product of thorough planning and execution of a well-conceived
reclamation plan. Restoration means returning the site to a condition that minimizes
erosion and sedimentation, supports productive and diverse plant and animal
communities and allows for the desired post-mining land use."
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Impending Regulations
Impending Regulations
In late 2005, the Montana Environmental Quality Council proposed the following requirement
for a mine reclamation plan.
The reclamation plan must conclusively demonstrate that, after... [two years] ...no
treatment of surface or ground water for carcinogens or toxins will be required to meet
water quality standards at the point of discharge.
In early 2006, the Board of Environmental Review amended the language of the proposed rule
to lower the standard of proof that water treatment would not be required beyond two years
by changing the wording from "conclusively demonstrate" to "demonstrate by clear and
convincing evidence." This was considered to reduce the 100 percent guarantee to a 70 percentprobability.
In a study of the economic impact of this regulation, this conclusion was reached.
As a result of adopting the proposed rule as amended in January 2006, an estimated 50 to 90
percent of future metal mining economic output and 10 to 25 percent of future industrial
mineral mining economic output in Montana would be prevented from developing... Overall,
these two mining sectors comprise less than 1.5 percent of Montana's total economy in
terms of jobs, wages, economic output and tax revenue. Therefore, the state economy as a
whole would not be significantly affected by the proposed rule. However, mining's
prominent history in Montana culture, its concentration in select counties, and the fact that
mining jobs are high-paying, would ensure that localized, significant effects would occur.
The proposal was tabled indefinitely when the Montana Department of Environmental Quality
came out against it. The bill in Idaho has been referred to a committee for further study.
Some General Observations
The brief, previously discussed survey of the great variety of mine closure criteria illustrates
that there is no one generally accepted approach, either in law or practice, to mine closure. As
we noted in the introduction to this section, find out what is applicable to your mine, do it, and
adjust to get a cost-effective approach.
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Case Histories and Landfills
Case Histories
East Geduld (South Africa)
One of the many deep gold mines on the East Rand of South Africa,
East Geduld operated for over fifty years. When I was growing up, my
father, who was Mine Captain on the mine, often spoke of his concernthat the mine would close and we would have to move on. But more
and more gold was found, and technology advanced to enable the
miners to go deeper and further. The mine endured for many years
after we moved away. Only a few years ago did I read that the mine
had finally been closed.
A quick search via Google Earth showed that the mine houses where we grew up were still
there. The area where there had been a shaft and mill is completely changed: now there are
big, secure buildings - a plant that makes artificial diamonds. The slimes dams are gone:
reworked to recover residual gold and uranium left behind in the first processing. The area is
green, taken back to fields.
The Witwatersrand (South Africa)
Much the same has happened to many of the old gold mines of the
Witwatersrand. This mining area gave rise to a dense urban
concentration. Some sixty percent of the population of South Africa is
said to live along the Witwatersrand gold belt. Johannesburg is the
major city that was founded to support the mines and which grew to
financial dominance serving the mining industry.
With closure of so many mines in this part of the world, the regional groundwater table is rising
to its former level. Mining over more than one hundred years resulted in a significant
depression of the groundwater level. As the mines went as deep as 6000 feet, the miners
pumped out the water that flowed into their mines. The water table dropped, and sinkholes
developed.
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Now the water level is rising and much of the water is contaminated; some is acidic and may
one day flow into surface creeks and streams. What to do? This is under study, and represents
as great a mine closure challenge as any anywhere in the world.
In theory, the issue of groundwater fall and rise as mining rose and fell could have been
addressed as just another project in mine closure planning. In practice, the history and courseof mining along the Witwatersrand did not allow this to be. The mines began well before
modern theories of mine closure were formulated. The mines were owned by many competing
mining companies. The effects were cumulative and additive. The focus of the times was on
technology and maintenance of white supremacy.
Yet, perusal of this case history alerts us to the benefits of comprehensive planning by the
mines and by the regulators of these areas in which many mines occur. Comprehensive
planning should include detailed consideration of closure of the individual mines and the total
effect on the areas in which the mines congregate. Similar situations occur today in the coal
fields of America, in the copper mines of Chile, and the oil sands of Alberta. Let us hope that
focus on closure of individual mine components, here an impoundment, there a waste rock
dump, over there a disturbed creek, do not distract attention from the bigger, regional-wide
issues of mine closure.
For this course, all we can do is bring your attention to the issues, and advise that in planning
closure of your single mine, you give at least a passing thought to the bigger issues of closure of
all the mines that occur in the region of your mine. You may not succeed, even when achieving
your best, if others in the region fail.
Cannon Mine, Wenatchee, Washington
The Cannon Mine was a gold mine that opened in the early 1980s southwest of Wenatchee,
WA. The tailings impoundment included an initial 100-m-high rock-fill embankment,
diversion channels, and hydraulically discharged tailings. With time, the embankment was
increased to 140 m high. The impoundment was operated successfully for the life of the mine,
and when mining stopped, the impoundment was reclaimed.
Today the reclaimed site is fully integrated into the surroundings and a good example of mine
closure that can be successfully undertaken close to urban areas. By 2001, county and state-
held bonds were released and in 2003 the impoundment (or at least those who undertook its
closure) was/were the recipient(s) of the Washington Department of Natural Resources
"Recognition for Reclamation Award."
Here is what you can read at thislinkon the current use of the site:
It's been called many things over the years: the Cannon Gold Mine, the Asamera Mine, the
holdings of Conoco Phillips, the property purchased by the Appleatche Riders. Now the land
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that borders Saddle Rock to the south and that was part of a mining operation until 1994 is
known as the Dry Gulch Preserve. The property, which was once part of the second largest
gold operation in the United States, was purchased from Conoco Phillips in 2007 with the
provision that the Land Trust would hold a conservation easement to it. This provision
prevents this 700-acre parcel from ever being developed and will keep the heavy-metal,hazardous-waste nasties leftover from the mining days permanently buried.
The Appleatche Riders wanted this property adjacent to their riding club for obvious reasons:
it gives their 650 members immediate access to a tremendous amount of terrain for riding
horses. After acquiring the property, the riding club quickly created a limited partnership,
called the Dry Gulch Preserve LLC, which holds and manages the property.
Despite the jokes about the toxic residues that are capped off and buried here, having so
much open space that is so easily accessible is a tremendous asset to Wenatchee residents.
About 8 miles of dirt roads and trails on the property provide places where you can walk, jog,
run the dog, and horseback ride (no motorized vehicles or mountain bikes allowed). The areastill shows the scars from its mining past, but there are surprisingly pretty places on the
property. Some of the high ridges and slopes are thick with blooming flowers in spring. And
many overlooks provide solid-gold views of the Columbia River Valley.
Let me end this story simpy by posting several pictures of the tailings impoundment after
closure, and one of the area which is now a riding stable.
Britannia Beach, British Columbia
A short drive up the coastal road from Vancouver is the Britannia Mine. When the mine first
started, it took a twelve-hour boat ride up rough seas to get there. But it was worth the trip, for
this was one of the largest copper mines in the world. Here is the basic story.
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In 1888, Alexander Forbes, an enterprising doctor from Scotland, arrived in Vancouver. Eager
to make his fortune in the local area, he met with prospector Granger who showed him some
promising rock samples. On a trip to the Howe Sound area to research further, Forbes shot at
a buck deer and the deer's flailing hooves exposed some mineralized rock below the moss. As
they cleared away the undergrowth, Forbes and Granger discovered what was soon to
become one of the largest deposits of copper in the world.
The miners drove tunnels deep into the towering hills beside the sea. They brought the ore out,
crushed the rocks, and dumped the tailings into the inlet to form the flat area where thehighway now goes. But the copper ran out, mining costs increased, and the mine was shut.
Low copper prices and the lure of the city life soon saw the Britannia Mining & Smelting
Company reduced to seven employees, and in 1959 it went into liquidation. In 1963 the
Anaconda Mining Company bought the property. A new ore zone and a new contract for the
miners saw increased production for the next eleven years. Operating costs and taxes rose
and eventually the mine was shut down on November 1, 1974. Fifty-five men went
underground on the last shift as the whistle blew a three-minute requiem for the Britannia
Mines.
Now the site is a museum where tourists stop to enjoy a trip down mining memory lane. The
area has been well reclaimed. The old mill has been restored. This is a good example of what
can be done on mine closure, although the water treatment plant will probably have to be
operated forever. That is not, however, what the museum's publicity proclaims; instead they
say this:
During the seventy-year life of Britannia Mines, 60,000 people of many races, languages and
religions, worked and made their homes in the area. In 1975, the Britannia Mine Museum
was opened to the public, and in 1988, Mill 3 was designated as a National Historic Site. Thefollowing year, the Museum site was designated a British Columbia Historic Landmark.
Leadville, Colorado et al.
Leadville, Colorado is an example of an old mining town that turned itself into a mining
museum. Need more be said?
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Half the towns in the Colorado Rockies are the remnants of mining. They, like Britannia Beach,
are fortunate to be in beautiful mountains, but the fact remains that the towns are there
because of mining; call it sustainable development if you will.
Indiana
The old Victory mine site in Indiana was reclaimed to productive use. Here is part of a press
release on the closure.
"What other abandoned mined land site can boast of being an operating landfill, a growingcommunity recreational center, the site of a world championship racing event, and the site of an
NCAA Championship event? The reclaimed Victory Mine Site was once a barren and eroded
abandoned mine refuse area that created sedimentation and acid mine drainage problems in an
adjacent stream. The site was also used as a trash disposal area for years and an open mine
entry presented a hazard to human safety. Today the site is a major community recreation area
and the location for local, national, and world sports events. The site has come a long way in the
last few years and the story is remarkable."
Landfills
In Huntington Beach, one of those beach cities hugging the coast of Orange County, California,
there was once an old quarry just outside of town. It supplied the rocks, gravel, and sand to
build the town which grew to surround the quarry. The city fathers decided to fill the quarry in
by using it as a landfill and so for many years the Gothard Street landfill was a stinky part oftown. Today the filled landfill is landscaped and covered with playing fields where every day
and evening there are contests of basketball, soccer, and baseball. It is now in the center of a
wealthy urban area and a nice place to recreate.
Eagle Mountain is an old mine on the eastern border of California. A large company sought to
turn it into a landfill. For years, they did the right things politically, including talking to the
locals. They failed however, for local opposition was too strong.
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Then there is the Mesquite Mine in south-east California. Los Angeles is running out of landfill
space. So they have built a huge landfill on the old Mesquite mine property and truck the waste
many hundreds of miles to the landfill. In due course, the waste will be transported there by
rail, and for the next thousand years the old mine will be the landfill of Los Angeles and
surrounding communities. They are not filling the pit with waste; the mining company still has
hopes of re-opening the open pit and going back into production.
4 Mine Closure Phases, Planning and Implemetation
Phases of Mine Closure
General
Different philosophies and hence technical approaches to mine
closure are applicable depending on both:
the reason for and the nature of mine closure; and
the stage of mining when you are undertaking mine closure
planning.
In this section we discuss the various stages or reasons for mine closure. We distinguish
between interim mine closure, temporary mine closure, premature mine closure, and closure at
the end of mine life. We spend a bit of time on the reasons for undertaking such closure and
give some guidelines on the main things to be done in the event of such closure.
Interim Mine Closure: Design and Operate for Closure
Interim mine closure is also sometimes called: design and operate for closure. Or: undertake
operations in such a way that you close facilities as operation proceeds. The idea is best
described with reference to mine development and the operation of mine waste facilities, as
follows.
Reclaim disturbed areas as soon as possible after disturbance.
Establish new wetlands and permanent ponds as soon as you can.
Operate the waste rock dump in such a way that you can close those parts of the dump that are
no longer needed.
Revegetate tailings impoundment slopes as the height of the slopes increases.
Place soil covers over parts of the impoundment surface that will no longer receive deposition. Close heap leach pads once used, and as you move on to new heap leach pads.
The basic idea is simple: lay out the mine and the waste disposal facilities so that they are
quickly, easily, and cheaply closed. Thus, place acid-generating rock in the middle of vast piles
of neutralizing rock; create flat slopes on waste rock dumps; and progressively construct covers
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on the tailings impoundment. Ideally, filter press and hence dry stack your tailings even if you
have lots of water available.
Design and operation for closure and the attendant implementation of interim closure may
save shareholders and taxpayers lots of money. It makes for fine conference presentations. In
practice, it is seldom used. The sad fact is that it is generally more profitable to use thecheapest approach to mining, to maximize present profits, and defer the costs of closure to
later.
Temporary Mine Closure
The reasons for temporary mine closure are many. A bitter strike has led to temporary closure
on many mines. The economic crashes of the early 1980s and of 2008 caused mines to close.
The price of gold, silver, and other metals fluctuates in response to market forces. The ore
grade may fall below the profitable mining grade. The mining technologies of the time may be
inadequate to extract the ore. So the mine closes. But prudent folk know the mine could be
reopened if conditions change. The mining company that owns the mine may decide not to go
for full closure and all that that means, including construction of the final closure works.
A comprehensive mine closure plan will provide for temporary mine closure. The work
undertaken in the event of temporary mine closure varies depending on the anticipated interim
closure period and the reasons for temporary closure.
Obviously there are some things that have to be done during a temporary closure, such as:
maintenance of security facilities;
upkeep of offices and plants that will be needed on reopening; operation of water treatment plans and other facilities to ensure compliance with
environmental protection needs;
ongoing monitoring of air and surface and groundwater quality as part of permit
stipulations;
liaising with the regulators to keep them informed and supportive of ongoing efforts to
maintain the mine and to reopen it as soon as is practical;
supporting affected workers who may be retained, relocated, or otherwise helped to
find other jobs at other mines; and
integrating with the community so that they understand what is going on and what your
intentions are. As for any aspect of mining, the community relations folk on the mineshould be fast and proactive in telling community leaders and all potentially affected
that the mine is about to be temporarily closed, explaining why this is necessary, and
seeking to impress on them that the mine will be cared for and kept in a condition that
promotes and facilitates reopening when times improve.
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Premature Mine Closure
Temporary mine closure implies a commitment to reopen the mine as soon as reasonable and
cost-effective. Closure at the end of mine life is usually an event that is well anticipated and
which may be planned for over a long time. Conversely, we define premature mine closure as
that most unfortunate event when a mine is humming along and all of a sudden, out of theblue, something happens and it is necessary to shut the mine down knowing that it is not
intended to be reopened.
The "somethings" that lead to premature mine closure can include;
world-wide economic crashes as occurred in the early 1980s and in 2008;
a collapse in the demand for the product mined; resulting, for example, from a regulation that
discourages use of the product, such as some grades of coal;
a flood, such as the one that occurred in Australia in late 2010 and early 2011;
breaching of a geological dike and a sudden rush of water into the underground mine workings
such as happened at Cigar Lake in 2006;
a fire in the mine or the plant resulting in the realization that it is just not cost-effective to
rebuild the fire-destroyed works; or
a change in the government, with the new government seizing the mine as part of political
change - this happens too often in Africa.
Regardless of the root cause, premature mine closure usually happens rather suddenly; closure
planning may not be in place to address the issues, and the money is just not there to pay for
full closure.
A good and comprehensive mine closure plan should include consideration of premature mine
closure. But it is not always possible to identify the myriad of things that may lead to this event.
It is unlikely that even comprehensive mine closure planning will be able to anticipate the
infinite variety of conditions at the mine that may be associated with premature mine closure.
Those left behind will undoubtedly have to scramble. Here are a few things they may need to
focus on.
First: take action to help the employees who are affected. Actions may include helping them
find new jobs, letting them remain on the payroll just a little longer, and providing for closure of
their careers on this mine.
Second: communicate with the community affected. Let them know what you know; reassure
them that you are planning to close the mine responsibly; help them to adjust where you can. Third: work with the regulators to ensure orderly and rational closure works construction, even
though this may mean a substantial change of approved closure plans and designs.
There will be instances where this cannot or will not be done. The closure is too sudden; the
causative event too disruptive; and the money is just not there. This is the tragedy of mine
closure that bonds and financial assurance is intended to deal with. (These topics are discussed
later in this course.)
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Somebody somewhere will dust off the Closure Plan, if there is one, curse their luck at having to
implement the plan with zero budget, and wonder about multiple trips to haggle with fussy
regulators unwilling to free up closure bonds.
Some lawyers and accountants will meet in secret to deliberate the benefits of going bankrupt.
The outcome will depend on the size and reputation of the owning mining company. If a smallcompany, there is a good chance that bankruptcy will be the better course. If the company is
large and well-known, they will swallow hard and seek to delay closure costs for as long as
possible.
As a regulator, you will have to recognize that you have the nigh-impossible task of forcing
implementation of the approved Closure Plan, if indeed there is one.
Temporary Closure Case History
Here is a rather sad story of temporary closure of an Australian mine.
Unionists say the temporary closure of Tasmania's Mt. Lyell copper mine has forced many
workers onto social security benefits. Copper Mines of Tasmania shut down its underground
mine at Queenstown a month ago, after heavy rain caused a mudslide. It initially expected to
have the problem fixed within days but the company now says it has no clear timetable.
About 180 Barminco underground mining contractors were required to take paid leave while
remedial work is carried out, but Rob Flanagan from the Australian Workers Union says many
of those have already used up all their leave. "Within weeks, 140 will be on social security
payments. There have been substantial royalties that the people of Tasmania have had as abenefit of Mt. Lyell, and it's at this point in time when the employees who have contributed
to that need the help of the people of Tasmania," Mr Flanagan said.
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Closure at End of Mine Life
The end of mine life inevitably happens; there simply is nothing left to mine. The event may
have been long-anticipated and long-planned-for. An orderly process of interim closure may
have been going on for some time. All that remains is to implement the final phases of closure
as well as described in the approved Mine Closure Plan.
This is the happy, orderly situation. There is time for the following, all of which should be
spelled out in the Closure Plan.
orderly reduction of staff to meet the reducing and changing needs for mining, processing,
monitoring, and construction of closure works
constructive interaction with the community, which has become used to the idea of mine
closure and had had time to prepare and adjust
calm and professional interaction with the regulators who have approved what you now set
about doing - there are no surprises, no pleas for last minute changes, and no agony over
promises made and broken the accountants are quiet, for there is money to close the mine, bonds are adequate, and upper
company management is not breathing fire down innocent necks
constructing the promised new golf course, community center, recreation facilities, riding
stables, and hunting grounds
tours by journalists around the closing and closed site, who come away with lots of good press,
and the mine receives awards for a good job done thoroughly
Post Closure Care and Maintenance
Once the closure works are constructed, post-closure care, monitoring,
and maintenance begin. It goes almost without saying that such
activities are undertaken in accordance with an approved plan.
Sometimes the plan is called the Post-Closure Monitoring and
Maintenance Plan; sometimes it is called the Surveillance and Monitoring Plan. Regardless of its
name, the plan will set out roles and responsibilities, standard operating procedures, reporting
obligations, and funding provisions.
To my knowledge, at most closed mines, a small team of people remain to undertake these
activities. The need for on-site staff post-closure is generally a result of the need for ongoing
water treatment. On-site staff may be needed to mow the grass, keep planting trees, maintain
fences, fix erosion gullies, and undertake groundwater-well monitoring and reporting.
If the site has truly been closed to remain stable in the long term and water treatment is not
involved, post-closure work may be undertaken by folk living far from the mine. On the UMTRA
Project, those charged with post-closure surveillance and maintenance operate from Grand
Junction, Colorado; they visit sites at regular intervals to observe general conditions and to
decide if any maintenance is required.
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In practice and in theory, post-closure surveillance and maintenance will be required forever at
sites that are not turned over to another group for beneficial use. Only if the closed site is
transferred to another group who makes beneficial use of the site, may we talk of "walk-away"
by the mining company. Thus, the rights to use the site as a race-track, riding stable, or hunting
ground may include the responsibility to maintain the site.
Closure Plans
General
Now that we have a good idea of the possible types of mine closure, or at least the reasons why
mines close, let us proceed to the issue of mine closure planning. My approach is based on the
simple rule of good management: plan the work, and work the plan. Ideally, you will prepare a
mine closure plan at the earliest possible time in mine evaluation and planning. Hopefully you
will update the closure plan as you advance to start of operations, and you will definitely
continuously update the plan as mining is undertaken.
Mine Closure Plans
Some mine closure plans are required by law, some are prepared as a matter of good planning
and management, some are prepared as part of evaluating and permitting a new mine, some
are prepared while the mine is in full-scale operation, and some are prepared long after actual
mining has ceased.
There is no such thing as a generic mine closure plan. As we have seen, mine closure practice
varies immensely: a new playing field on the flattened site of a mountaintop mine in Virginia isvery different from a new diamond plant on a mine in South Africa, which is very different from
a restored arboreal forest in the coldest part of Northern Canada.
Some jurisdictions mandate the contents of a mine closure plan. Examples include Nevada and
Western Australia. Some regulators come to expect a certain format from the consultants
working in the area. Regardless, here are the minimum contents of a mine closure plan:
roles and responsibilities;
mine description: region, site, mine, plant, and waste facilities;
closure engineering and technical plans: interim, temporary, premature, and final;
post-closure surveillance and maintenance;
financial mechanisms and assurance;
employee impact mitigation; and
community engagement.
Here is a different take on the contents. It is from a paper by D.R. Welsh (Welsh (2007))(bullets
added).
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The key elements of a mine closure plan that should be specified in regulations include:
a project description;
details of the operator and mining tenement holder;
background information about the existing environment;
actions for making the site safe including the decommissioning and dismantling of theplant and buildings and closure of underground works;
rehabilitation of all disturbed areas;
arrangements for the workforce;
proposals for community engagement;
proposed research to drive improvement;
closure implementation including schedules, review process and environmental
monitoring; and
cost estimates.
A mine closure plan may be part of - or an adjunct to - one or more of thefollowing:
a mine feasibility study;
an environmental impact statement preceeding opening of the mine;
a Mine Operating Permit;
an application to a bank or other lending institution for funding to open or expand
the mine;
the NI 43-101 (or equivalent) documents as issued to support company listing or
other stock exchange regulations and requirements; and
a Record of Decision on closing a mine.
Clearly, the amount of detail in the plan will vary depending on the phase of mine planning
and/or operation and the primary purpose for which the plan is intended.
On the basis of the good management principle of Continuous Improvement, we recommend
that the mine closure plan be updated regularly. Times change, circumstances change, mine
operations advance, monitoring reveals new truths about impacts, and people come and go. It
is necessary and prudent to update the closure plan at least every two years and whenever
there is a significant change in operations or impacts.
We will now consider some of those phases of mining that influence the nature and extent of a
mine's closure plan.
Closure Planning
Here are recommendations by Dave Bentel included in a presentation at the University of
Nevada (Bentel (2007)).
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Step 1: Closure planning database - develop a site closure database/library (i.e. existing,
technically valid data that characterizes site conditions potentially influencing, or potentially
influenced by, mine closure). Initial planning is performed using available data only (i.e. no
additional characterization until it can be justified by the process).
Step 2: Identification and preliminary classification of site facilities - identify and
document all site facilities. Based on available operational data and physical inspection,
classify into facility types that may require similar closure actions, e.g. gold heap leach
facilities, waste rock dumps consisting of similar waste rock types, tailings disposal facilities,
pits with lakes, dry pen pits, crushing and milling process plant facilities, buildings,
infrastructure, etc.
Step 3: Documentation of site conditions affecting closure- document known and baseline
site conditions based on data research and physical inspections for: existing facilities;
anticipated facility status at closure; groundwater resources; surface water resources; air
quality; physical and geochemical characteristics of process and waste materials; chemicalcharacteristics and flow rates of site waters requiring management; climatological
conditions; site soil and erosion potential; potential closure borrow sources; site vegetation;
and avian and terrestrial wildlife.
Step 4: Site regulatory analysis- identify regulatory closure criteria. Analysis must cover all
pertinent regulatory bodies and regulations.
Steps 1 to 4 are the least you should do. Steps 5, 6, 7, and 8 may be undertaken depending
on corporate policy.
Step 5: Stakeholder analysis - identify existing and potential stakeholders and perform a
site stakeholder analysis to document potential and existing stakeholder issues. Develop
criteria to address these issues.
Step 6: Corporate and site management criteria- identify corporate and site management
goals (overarching goals) for closure, including financial and cash flow reporting
requirements and asset preservation strategies.
Step 7: Closure impact assessment - use criteria previously identified to assess potential
impacts of closure to health, safety, environment, and community.
Step 8: Risk assessment- develop a site closure risk register that: identifies and ranks risk
issues resulting from potential impacts; identifies risk issues that require risk management
to appropriately reduce the zero-base ranking; and develops risk management criteria.
Step 9: Conceptual closure design - develop conceptual engineering options that provide
solutions that, at a minimum, address conceptual design criteria and risk management
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criteria.
Step 10: Basis of cost estimate- develop a basis of cost estimate that provides detail of how
quantities are measured and how unit rates are obtained.
Step 11: Cost estimate - develop cost estimates that meet corporate financial reporting
criteria. Compare capital and operating costs for each conceptual option.
Step 12: Residual risk assessment - use the risk register to demonstrate that the closure
options selected provide appropriate risk reduction. Evaluate the relative risk reduction
benefits for each option.
Step 13: Optimization of conceptual design - select and cost the conceptual closure design
options that are judged to best meet criteria and risk reduction goals.
Design and Operation
Site and Region Characterization
An early activity associated with most modern mining is characterization of the site and region
of the mine. This is not the place to go into the details - they are well addressed in other
EduMine courses such as Geotechnical Engineering for Mine GeoWaste Facilities,
Groundwater in Mining,Surface Water Management at Mines,andMine Water and Chemical
Balance Analysis.At this stage of mine evaluation you should collect as much information as
possible about the pre-mining conditions at the site and in the surrounding area. Gather data
about geology, geomorphology, stream flow, groundwater, naturally occurring constituentsthat later regulators may brand as contaminants, and the lives and histories of those who have
and do now live around the area of the proposed mine.
To emphasize this advice, here is a case history. Some forty miles east of San Francisco is an old
mine. It operated for about five years and never made a profit. Then it was closed.
The site is beautiful: green grasses covering rolling hills, contented cattle and deer roaming the
golden rises, a lake of tranquil waters behind a solid embankment, views of the distant hills and
fields, and flowers in full bloom. You can see why the wealthy come to snap up the surrounding
properties and commute to well-paying jobs in San Francisco.
The mine has been "in closure" ever since it ceased mining. Millions have been spent on
lawyers, lobbyists, consultants, and actual works to make dilution the solution. It will never be
"closed" in the sense that people can never walk away and the area will never "perform" as
part of nature and not affect downstream folk.
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The early history of the site is well documented in Brian Fagan's book Before California: an
Archaeologist Looks as Our Earliest Inhabitants. He chronicles the inhabitants of the area who
came to gather acorns and salt. Before the mine was developed, massive graves had to be
excavated and moved. This provided the archaeologists with the information set out in Fagan's
book: the ancients came for salt because a fault which contained gold forced salty water to the
surface. The ancients gathered the salt and the acorns of the surrounding woods.
The miners failed to adequately characterize background conditions before mining. Salt
continues to emerge and flow from the site. The mine's claim that this is background has never
succeeded with the regulators, who see salt turning downstream golf courses white and crusty
and respond to the folk who commute to San Francisco and demand only pristine, salt-free
water from the site.
Thus, for decades since mine closure, more has been spent than ever was earned by the mine.
Expenditure in pursuit of clean water releases will be a never-ending goal of regulators and
wealthy downstream land-owners. The original mining company has been taken over by a
foreign company and they grow tired of such expenditure. They have engaged new consultants
to evaluate the long history of high post-closure expenses and to tell them how to stem this
never-ending bleed of money.
The simple answer is to put about $12 million in an interest-bearing account at, say, three
percent, and continue forever to manage the site and send water downstream that does not
affect local golf courses, rivers, farms, and ultimately the ocean.
Feasibility Stage Evaluation
If you are evaluating the feasibility of opening a new mine, you will surely have to prepare an NI43-101 or equivalent document. Such documents are required these days by almost all stock
exchanges where shares in mines and mining companies are traded. The details of such
documents vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but they all have a common aim: tell potential
investors why this may be a viable and profitable mine. So, set out the data, including costs,
thus enabling prospective investors to make up their own minds about the risks and rewards of
buying shares.
Obviously there is a real cost associated with closure of the mine. It is going to cost you to post
closure bonds and make other financial provisions for closure. These closure-related costs may
well affect the financial viability of the mine. Potential investors must be told, for otherwise
they may have a valid claim for fraud or suppression of information.
Formulate at least a preliminary closure approach and make at least a preliminary assessment
of potential closure costs.
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If you are a consultant engaged to do this, my best advice is to overestimate closure costs. Such
costs never seem to go down, but always increase and increase. No point in having to go back
later and admit you underestimated costs.
If you are working for the mining company, you may choose to minimize closure cost estimates.
You will probably have retired by the time the true, higher cost is confirmed. The lower costestimate will reduce the cost of the project, thus pushing up the value of the project and hence
share prices.
If you are a potential buyer of shares, the previous advice, different depending on who
prepares cost estimates, should be sufficient to warn you to be skeptical about closure cost
estimates in NI 43-101s and similar. The estimates are probably all way off. What you have to
decide as a potential investor is: which way does the inaccuracy lie, and how does this bias
affect the value of shares now and in the future? In brief, you should ask: can I sell the shares
before the implications of closure costs drive share prices down?
Design and Operation
You are the engineer charged with preparing mine design and operations plans. In the spirit
that you can and should plan and operate for closure, we recommend that you persist through
this course to the section of the technical aspects of mine closure. Be aware of them,
understand them, and seek to avoid or mitigate the impacts of the negatives and emphasize
the benefits of the positive. How you plan and operate the mine may make for successful, cost-
effective closure. Failure to take experience of mine closure into account may result in overly
costly and technically ineffective mine closure.
Now is the time to consider and deal with at least the following issues that come into play inbest practice mine closure see the details in later sections on technical aspects of closure:
access transport roads and how they may be maintained during and after mine
operations;
acid rock drainage;
backfilling of stopes;
backfilling of pits;
erosion potential of design storms and floods and measure required to mitigate
impacts;
groundwater protection;
pit lakes and the optimum shaping and filling of the pits; structures and their foundations and how they may be beneficially used at mine
closure - or demolished and removed;
surface water management and provisions for control of erosion;
subsidence due to unfilled mine workings;
tailings impoundment slopes and benches and their geometry;
topographic shaping of waste rock dumps and tailings impoundments; and
wetlands.
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Regardless of which of these or other site-specific issues you elect to deal with, the mine
closure plan should address them in detail and spell out what to do when mine closure
happens.
Case Study: Wismut
Before the Second World War, Chemnitz was a thriving textile center. Rich Jewish merchants
built beautiful homes from the profits of cloth and clothes. Then came the war. The Nazis
moved into the houses and claimed the riches for themselves.
The Russians came from the east and displaced the Nazis. The Russians needed the uranium in
the local strata. They fenced off an are