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S27 - Tailings and Tailings Ponds
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Presentations | ||
The application of quantitative risk assessment to assessing the impact of tailings management facilities on groundwater resources WSP, United Kingdom Tailings Management Facilities may pose a significant risk to downgradient surface water and groundwater environments. Evaluating the risks these facilities present to water resources is pivotal during mine closure. This paper discusses the use of probabilistic simulation within quantitative analytical models to evaluate these risks, especially in scenarios where limited environmental data may undermine confidence in the predictive outcomes. The application of probabilistic modelling will be demonstrated through case studies that utilise probabilistic risk assessment to evaluate various closure and remediation strategies for a tailings management facility, as well as to quantify uncertainty levels in risk assessments. The paper will consider the impact of different liner and cover systems and the importance of considering tailings management facility holistically recognising that factors such as closure landform and cover design are as integral to mitigating risk as basal liner design. Mine Water in the Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management ERM, United Kingdom Brumadinho and Samarco Mariana tailings storage facilities (TSF) failures in Brazil caused deaths and environmental damage, prompting the Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management (GISTM) in 2020. The International Council on Mining and Metal (ICMM) required members to disclose information on extreme and very high consequence TSFs by 2023 and all TSFs by 2025. This study analyses the integrated knowledge base developed for 56 TSFs across various geographies and commodities, assessing data sufficiency across 25 water topics. Despite generally high compliance, systematic gaps exist globally. The findings are relevant to mining companies, environmental professionals and the ICMM for GISTM compliance. As, Sb and sulphate immobilization from flotation tailings of an intrusion-related gold mineralization 1University of Oviedo, Spain; 2Exploraciones Mineras del Cantábrico The Salave Gold Prospect is the largest unexploited and well-known gold deposit on the Iberian Peninsula (measured resources are more than 1 Moz Au at 4.6 g Au/t). It is located in NW Spain, 2 km E of the village of Tapia de Casariego, about 500 m far from the coastline, in the Bay of Biscay. It is an intrusion-related gold deposit, hosted by a Hercynian-age granodiorite (330-287 My), in which gold occurs almost exclusively as refractory and invisible, mainly within the arsenopyrite crystal structure. Although there are appreciable quantities of other metallic sulfides, the main species are pyrite, arsenopyrite, stibnite and molybdenite. This project -currently immerse in the administrative processing phase- is envisioned to be exclusively developed by underground mining. The final product, in order to avoid in situ cyanide employment, is a sulfide concentrate obtained by gravity and flotation. |