Showing posts with label Hydromet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hydromet. Show all posts

Monday, 23 March 2026

Maelgwyn Mineral Services and Capstone Copper are the first sponsors of Hydrometallurgy '27

Welsh company Maelgwyn Mineral Services is a regular sponsor of MEI's comminution and flotation conferences, but Hydrometallurgy '26 provides the opportunity of promoting its Aachen high shear reactors. These are predominantly used in gold leaching for pre-oxygenation to increase gold recoveries via enhanced kinetics and removal of passivating films. There are now more than 100 of these highly efficient mass transfer devices operating globally. The Aachen reactors have also found application in the treatment of refractory gold flotation concentrates as a lower cost alternative to roasting or pressure oxidation using Maelgwyn’s patented Leachox process. 

Capstone Copper is a producer of copper cathode and copper concentrates, with three of its assets producing copper cathodes from heap leach and SX/EW facilities. It has various ongoing hydrometallurgical development projects targeting, among others, cobalt byproduct production at Mantoverde and Santo Domingo in Chile copper production via halide leaching of historic mill and leach tails at Mantos Blancos in Chile, and concentrate leaching at various operating sites.

Capstone has also agreed to sponsor AI in Mineral Processing '26, which immediately precedes Hydrometallurgy '26. joining Promet101. A big thanks to these two companies, as Capstone is now committed to sponsorship of all MEI Conferences in this and next year, and Promet101 six of these eight upcoming events (see also posting of 22 January 2026).

#Hydrometallurgy26
#AI26
#MEIBlog

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Hydrometallurgy '27

Hydrometallurgy is at the heart of sustainable mineral processing, driving innovation in the recovery of critical metals, resource efficiency, and environmental responsibility. Hydrometallurgy '27 is the 2nd in the MEI series, the first being in Adelaide in 2000. It aims to bring together researchers, industry leaders, and technology developers in hydro and biohydrometallurgy, to explore the latest advances in leaching, solvent extraction, ion exchange, electrowinning, process design, and waste management. 

Dr Frank Crundwell, Director of CM Solutions Metlab, South Africa, a globally-recognised authority on mineral dissolution and leaching, has been appointed as advisory lead for the conference. "CM Solutions is delighted to contribute to this prestigious event" says Ben Knights, CM Solutions CEO. "The CM Solutions team has a reputation for its hydrometallurgy expertise, and Frank’s pioneering work has earned him international recognition. Frank’s guidance of the technical direction of this event will help contribute to the future of hydrometallurgy"

In 2021 Frank received the SME's Milton E. Wadsworth Metallurgy Award, which recognises distinguished contributions that advance understanding of the science and technology of non-ferrous chemical metallurgy and he was nominated on the basis of his work in hydrometallurgy, leaching and the development of the theory of dissolution. 

Through keynote presentations, technical sessions, and networking opportunities, participants at Hydrometallurgy '27 will gain insights into emerging technologies and the challenges and opportunities shaping the future of hydrometallurgy.

Abstracts are invited for presentation at Hydrometallurgy '27 via the online portal by December 31st 2026.

#Hydrometallurgy27
#MEIBlog

Sunday, 9 November 2025

Circular hydrometallurgy approaches towards more sustainable processing of critical minerals

Circular hydrometallurgy is an emerging approach in metal extraction and recovery that applies circular economy principles (reduce, reuse, recycle, and recover) to traditional hydrometallurgical processes. It is a sustainable, closed-loop approach to metal recovery that turns waste into a resource, integrating hydrometallurgical science with circular economy thinking.

Circular hydrometallurgy is becoming a cornerstone perspective for extractive metallurgical processes, and in particular for the processing of critical minerals, and their associated metals and materials. In a keynote lecture at Critical Minerals '26, Jacques Eksteen, a Professor in the WA School of Mines, at Curtin University, Australia, will review examples in the development of novel processes for some critical minerals essential in the Energy Transition, such as nickel, cobalt and copper, and associated precious metals such as PGMs, gold and silver. 

The Energy Transition towards cleaner forms of non-fossil energy requires a complete rethink as to how we design our processes from the perspectives of energy utilisation, the use of benign reagents, the recycling and reuse of reagents and water, and valorisation of traditional waste products. The circularity around waste products, water and reagents reuse will be emphasised, while still ensuring economic feasibility.

Prof. Eksteen will provide examples where amino acids have been used in hydrometallurgical pathways to extract and refine a variety of critical metals from their ores, tailings, concentrates and from various technospheric (i.e. human-derived) waste materials. This will be an interesting precurser to the keynote lecture from Prof. Chun-Xia Zhao. who will show how her team at the University of Adelaide are developing designer peptides, short chains of amino acids, tailored for specific mineral binding and flotation applications.

Jacques Eksteen is the Manager of the Critical Minerals Metals and Materials for the Energy Transition research group at Curtin University. He is also the Interim Research Director for the Critical Metals for Critical Industries CRC. In addition, he was the Program Lead for Technology Readiness Level Progression in the Critical Minerals and Resources Technology Trailblazer, and held the roles Chief Scientist, Chief Operating Officer, and Research Director  of the Future Battery Industries Cooperative Research Centre Ltd. He was Director of the Gold Technology Group and project manager of the AMIRA 420 project from 2012 to 2019. Jacques holds a PhD in Extractive Metallurgical Engineering and has 32 years of experience in industry and academia. He has published over 200 journal papers and conference proceedings and is a listed inventor on 10 patent families.

#CriticalMinerals26

Thursday, 22 June 2023

Biomining '23: a summary of the technical presentations

Biomining '23, MEI's 11th International Symposium on Biomining was held at the National Maritime Museum Cornwall in Falmouth, UK, from June 5-6, 2023. It was organised in consultation with Prof. Sue Harrison, of the University of Cape Town, South Africa and Dr. Chris Bryan, of BRGM, France, with media Partners International Mining and Minerals Engineering and Industry Advocates the Critical Minerals Association.

Following is a summary of the presentations made in the technical sessions over the two days.  The draft papers associated with the presentations are available online as open access. The drafts have not been refereed, but all the presenters have been invited to submit their final papers for peer-review to a virtual special issue of Minerals Engineering.

Monday June 5th

The conference was opened this morning by MEI's Jon Wills, who welcomed the 55 delegates from 14 countries, and then the proceedings got off to a fine start with a keynote from Axel Schippers, who is highly respected in the field of biohydrometallurgy. He has been with the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (FIGNR) in Germany since 2007 and now heads the Geomicrobiology unit. In 2006 he qualified as lecturer in microbiology and geochemistry at the Leibniz University of Hannover and was appointed as Professor in 2011. His keynote lecture showed how biohydrometallurgy offers various process options including bioleaching, biooxidation, biomineralization, bioprecipitation, biosorption and bioelectrochemistry for metal recovery from primary and secondary resources.

Axel was a co-author of the next presentation, by his FIGNR colleague Stefanie Hetz, an environmental microbiologist with focus on nitrogen, sulfur and iron cycles. She did research at the Universities of Bayreuth and Hannover before moving to FIGNR in 2021 and her presentation explored options for stirred-tank reactor and column bioleaching of nickel and cobalt from Brazilian laterite ores.

Stefanie Hetz and Axel Schippers

Ana Santos has presented work at previous MEI biomining conferences as a PhD student at Bangor University, UK, from where she graduated in 2018 before working as a post-doctoral researcher until 2021. She joined London's Natural History Museum in February 2022 as a Research Fellow in Geomicrobiology and she has been working on the development of novel and improved biotechnologies to extract base and rare-earth metals from mine wastes and from new, untapped resources such as marine polymetallic nodules, the subject of her presentation.

Ana Santos (right) with Paula Morais of University of Coimbra, Portugal

Paul Norris, of the University of Exeter, UK is currently biohydrometallurgy consultant for GSL in Cornwall, following fifty years of research at the Universities of London and Warwick, with over 80 publications concerning microbiology of extreme environments, acidophilic microorganisms and biohydrometallurgy. This morning he discussed the continuous bioreactor processing of a nickel sulfide concentrate with moderately thermophilic bacteria and archaea.

Paul Norris (left) with Dave Dew (UK), Anders Sand (Sweden)
and Anne-Gwenaelle Guezennec (France)

Ivan Nancucheo (left) of the Universidad San Sebastián, Spain, has a PhD degree in microbiology from Bangor University, where he was a post-doc in a bioreductive dissolution of laterites project led by Professor Barrie Johnson. He worked in Brazil at Vale Mining Company for three years and during this period he was a visiting scholar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He presented work on the recovery of “pure” CuS nanoparticles using biogenic H2S from a complex bioleach liquor.

Alfonso Mazuelos is a Senior Lecturer in Chemical Engineering at the University of Seville, Spain and he discussed continuous ferrous iron biooxidation in a packed-bed bioreactor at very extreme acidity conditions.

Blanca Perdigones is a PhD student at the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Seville. She holds a degree in Biochemistry from the Universities of Seville and Malaga, a Master's degree in Water Quality Sciences and Techniques from the University of Granada and a Master's degree in Advanced Studies in Chemistry from the University of Seville. Blanca has collaborated in research in international environments such as in Chile and Argentina. She is currently a grant holder in the European RAWMINA project within the framework of the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, where she is developing her thesis on the starting-up of bioleaching bioreactors. She presented work on adaptation of an iron oxidizing culture to extremely high Fe concentration by a programmed fed batch bioreactor.

Blanca and Alfonso

The presentation from Laura Castro (left), an Assistant Professor at Complutense University of Madrid, Spain took us up to the lunch break. She discussed the isolation of a halotolerant and iron oxidizing bacterium from Rio Tinto, Spain, with potential for seawater bioleaching.

Paul Norris, in his second presentation of the day, discussed the carbon dioxide requirements and fixation by various mineral-sulfide oxidizing bacteria.

Didi Makaula is a scientist in the Biometallurgy Division at Mintek, South Africa. He also works in partnership with commercial organisations to improve the growth of bioleaching cultures at different temperature profiles and he presented work aimed at bridging the temperature gap from thermotolerant mesophilic to moderate thermophilic conditions. The insights gained from these studies will assist with the selection, adaptation and maintenance of the best performing cultures in these higher temperature profiles.  

Didi Makaula (right) with Dave Dew (UK) and Nokubonga Zulu (South Africa)

Megan Barnett (left) has been at the British Geological Survey since 2015. Her biomining research had focused on REE, but she also has interests in the sustainable extraction of other critical metals. Megan discussed changing REE leaching profiles by bioleaching with methylotrophs.

Fernando Vera is a PhD student at the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso, Chile and he explained how copper smelters currently deal with arsenic contamination in processed ores. Chemical processes for removing arsenics are expensive and ineffective, and he evaluated the biological treatment of arsenic in effluents from a copper smelter gas washing plant using a consortium of iron-oxidizing mesophiles (35 °C) adapted to As(III). 

Fernando (left) during one of the morning breaks

Ishaaq Hajee holds an MSc in chemistry, having majored in chemistry and biochemistry at the undergraduate level. He then entered the mining industry and has worked at refineries, froth flotation plants, and various chrome mines across Africa. He is now a PhD student at the University of Cape Town, and presented his work which involves using naturally occurring bacterial phenomena to help prevent acid rock drainage, a process which threatens to pollute the already scarce water resources in South Africa.

Ishaaq (right) with UCT colleagues Sue Harrison and Msimelelo Gcayiya

After completing her BSc and MSc studies in Life Science & Technology at the Technical University of Delft, Charlotte (Lot) van der Graaf went to Wageningen University & Research, both in the Netherlands, for her PhD research. There she focused on microbial and chemical sulfide production at acidic conditions, with the aim of improving process economics of the treatment of metalliferous waste streams (acid mine drainage, metallurgy waters) through metal sulfide precipitation. Lot is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Cadiz, Spain, where she studies metallic copper formation in acid mine drainage biofilms found in the Rio Tinto area (Huelva, Spain), the subject of her presentation.

Lot van der Graaf with Stefanie Hetz (Germany)

Bailee Johnson completed her B. Eng in Materials Engineering at McGill University, Canada. Throughout her Bachelors degree, she worked in Prof. Kristian Waters' mineral processing laboratory as an undergraduate research assistant; as a result of her work, she has contributing authorship on two published academic papers as well as a first-place-winning technical report presented at Canadian Mineral Processors 2018. On graduation, Bailee worked for CiDRA Minerals Processing and supported the development and scale-up of a novel mineral processing technique. Her work took her to concentration plants across North and South America; she served as onsite project lead for two of these projects. Now completing her MSc at McGill University, she is a CMP 2021 Scholarship recipient and McGill Graduate Excellence Fellow for 2021 and her paper, the last of the day, was an investigation of froth flotation of municipal wastewater treatment plant biosolids for phosphorus separation.

Bailee with McGill colleague Ozan Kokkilic 

After a long day it was good to get out into the warm Cornish sunshine for the 3 mile guided coastal path walk, followed by drinks at the Chain Locker pub (see Monday at Biomining '23).

Tuesday June 6th

Karen Hudson-Edwards got the day underway with a keynote lecture reviewing the biomining of copper and other technology metals. Karen is Professor in Sustainable Mining at the Camborne School of Mines and Environment and Sustainability Institute at the University of Exeter, UK. She was the 2012/3 Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland’s Hallimond Lecturer, the 2016 Australian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy New Zealand's Visiting Lecturer and the 2019 European Association of Geochemistry’s Distinguished Lecturer.

Karen (right) with Sue Harrison and Carmen Falagan at Monday's sundowner at the Chain Locker

Klemens Kremser is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Natural Resources and Life Science Vienna and the Austrian Centre of Industrial Biotechnology. He discussed Project FuLIBatteR, future lithium-ion battery recycling for the recovery of critical raw materials.

Klemens with Daniel Kupka (Slovakia)

Lidia Garcia Saez (left) is a PhD Researcher at the Universitat Politècnica De Catalunya, Spain, working on the recovery of valuable metals from lithium-ion batteries. Her presentation was on a multi-step bio-based process for recovering valuable metals from spent lithium-ion batteries without extreme pH and temperature.

After graduating in metallurgy in Iran, Mohammad Khoshkhoo worked for a few years there in the mining sector before moving to Luleå, Sweden in 2007, where he completed his master and doctorate studies in process metallurgy. He is now a Senior Development Engineer at Boliden Mineral, Sweden, and he presented results of a pilot campaign for the recovery of battery metals from low-grade mining residues via stirred tank bioleaching.

Mohammad with Blanca Perdigones (Spain)

Jens Markowski is a scientific assistant at the Brandenburg University of Technology, Germany and he described his experiences in the commissioning of a bioleaching plant for the recovery of gold from printed circuit boards.

Jens with Stoyan Gaydardzhiev (Belgium)

Anna Sieber holds a master's degree of Biotechnology from the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) in Vienna, Austria. After working for 2 years in industrial research, she started her PhD at K1-MET in cooperation with BOKU. Her research focuses on the recovery of metals from various waste stream and her presentation looked at the application of spent brewer’s yeast as a selective biosorbent for metal recovery from polymetallic waste streams.

Rebeka Frueholz is also representing K1-MET in Austria and is currently pursuing a PhD in the field of bioleaching using thermophilic bacteria. She discussed zinc removal from metallurgical dusts with sulfur-oxidizing bacteria.

Rebecca and Anna with their K1-Met colleague Lalropula Lalropula (right) and Stuart Wagland (UK)

Eva Pakostova graduated with a PhD in Biochemistry at the Masaryk University, Czech Republic, in 2016. She then worked as a post-doc at Bangor University, developing a new mining concept for extracting metals from deep ore deposits, using biotechnology. During another post-doc at the University of Waterloo, Canada she contributed with her microbiological expertise to the development of improved strategies for managing mine-waste environments and implementation of the innovative remediation technologies at an industrial scale. Eva joined Coventry University, UK, as Assistant Professor in 2020. She develops novel and improved biotechnologies to extract base and precious metals from primary ores and secondary (mine and electronic wastes) sources. In her presentation, co-authored with Neil Rowson of Bunting-Redditch, UK, she discussed the bioleaching of metals from automotive catalysts, focusing on magnetic separation and base metal removal using acidophilic bacteria.

Eva (right) with Daniel Kupka, Lenka Hagarova and Zuzana Bartova of Slovakia

Antonio David Dorado is a researcher at the Universitat Politècnica De Catalunya, Spain. He has a UPC Doctorate Extraordinary Award in Natural Resources and Environment and has spent time abroad, with postdoctoral studies at the University of Nueva Gales del Sur, Sydney, Australia and the PUC of Valparaíso, Chile. He described a high productivity bioprocess for obtaining metallic copper from printed circuit boards.

Antonio David relaxing at the Chain Locker sundowner

MEI conference consultant Sue Harrison, Director at the Centre For Bioprocess Enineering Research, University of Cape Town, South Africa, needs little introduction. She discussed the bioleaching of printed circuit boards in a continuous two-stage system including a re-circulating packed-bed reactor for improved regeneration of ferric ion.

Lalropuia Lalropuia currently works as a PhD Researcher at K1-MET, Austria and his research focuses on bioleaching of critical metals from spent lithium-ion batteries, the subject of his presentation. Lalropuia has a bachelor's degree in Mining Engineering from Bhagwant University, India and a master's degree in Advanced Mineral Resource Development from TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Germany and Montan University Leoben, Austria.

Carmen Falagan has been working in biomining for the past years in the European project NEMO at the University of Exeter before moving to the University of Portsmouth as a lecturer in Environmental Microbiology. She is interested in bioremediation and in developing new bioleaching approaches for mine tailings to minimise the impact of mining in the environment. Her presentation evaluated a pilot scale study for base metals recovery from low grade sulfidic residue ore.

Stoyan Gaydardzhiev also needs little introduction, as he is a familiar face at MEI Conferences. He is Professor and Head of the Mineral Processing and Recycling Unit at the University of Liege, Belgium, involved in various EU, national and regional research projects in the area of the circular economy and recycling and valorisation of metals. Taking us to the lunch break, he discussed the bioleaching of black mass from spent LiBs.

The final session began with a presentation from Douglas Pino Herrera, a process engineer/researcher at BRGM, France. He has a PhD in Environmental Technology from the University Gustave Eiffel in Paris, and he discussed bioleaching process development and optimization to recover critical raw materials from sulfidic mining wastes.

Douglas (3rd left) at the Chain Locker sundowner

Paula Morais. of the University of Coimbra, Portugal, works in environmental microbiology and she is the curator of the UCCCB Bacterial Culture Collection which constitutes an infrastructure of the University of Coimbra. Her presentation looked at biopolymer stabilization of bioleached mine residue to produce technosol.

Another speaker who needs little introduction is Barrie Johnson, Professor Emeritus at Bangor and Coventry Universities and a Scientific Associate at the Natural History Museum, London. He compared two bioleaching protocols for extracting and recovering nickel from pyrrhotite waste.

Barrie Johnson (left) at the welcoming reception

Zuzana Bártová is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Geotechnics at the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia. She studied biology as her major at the University of Pavol Jozef Šafárik in Košice, Slovakia. Her main focus is on bioleaching processes using microorganisms, bacterial growth kinetics and raw materials acquisition from acid mine drainage and she discussed metal recovery and remediation of mine water effluent from a siderite deposit at Nižná Slaná, eastern Slovakia.

Zuzana (right) at the Chain Locker sundowner

Jaeheon Lee (left) is an associate professor in the department of mining engineering at Colorado School of Mines, USA. Prior to that he worked for Newmont and Barrick as a corporate metallurgical engineer and held the position as a faculty in the department of mining and geological engineering at the University of Arizona. He discussed the role of biohydrometallurgy for mine tailings repurposing and valorization.

Anne-Gwenaelle Guezennec, of BRGM, France is a well known expert in biohydrometallurgy and more specifically in bioleaching process design. She highlighted pilot-scale demonstrations of innovative biohydrometallurgy for sustainable valorisation of mining waste.

Anne-Gwenaelle (centre) at the welcoming reception

Ipek Tezyapar Kara (left) is a PhD Researcher at Cranfield University, UK. Ipek has a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Engineering from Kocaeli University, Turkey and she completed her M.Sc. degree at the same university in 2019. She discussed the bioleaching of metal ions from Basic Oxygen Furnace sludge and dust by Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans.

The final presentation of the conference was deferred from yesterday, as Nokubonga Given Zulu was delayed due to the travel disruption. Given was born and raised in South Africa, in a small village in KwaZulu Natal. She is a graduate in Extraction Metallurgy from the University of Johannesburg (UJ) and is currently pursuing an MEng in Extraction Metallurgy at UJ, majoring in bioflotation and bioleaching.  She has also worked at the Kibali Gold Mine (Barrick Gold Corporation) as a trainee metallurgist. Her presentation investigated the application of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans in biomodification and pre-concentration of base metal sulphides prior to flotation.

Nokubonga looking after the drinks at the Chain Locker!

After a brief summary of the conference from Prof. Sue Harrison, MEI's Amanda Wills thanked everyone involved with the conference and invited everyone to join us in Cape Town in two years time for Biomining '25, before we all adjourned for a farewell Cornish Cream Tea, making sure that the jam was put on the scones before the cream!

We would greatly appreciate your views on the conference via comments to this posting.  

All the photos on the blog postings, and more, are in a Biomining '23 Album. Please feel free to download photos for your personal use. If you would like to use any photos on a company website, please acknowledge the source (MEI Blog).

#Biomining23   @barrywills

Thursday, 24 November 2022

The final day at the International Biohydrometallurgy Symposium

 Amanda reports on the final day of IBS 2022:

Delegates preparing for the final day

Mario Vera (Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, Chile) began the final day of the conference, with his keynote presentation on "Biofilm lifestyle of bioleaching microorganisms".

Next, we heard from Catherine Joulian (BRGM, France) with her presentation on "Bioleaching community dynamics during adaptation and process upscaling of a secondary polysulfidic ore".

Following Catherine, Robert Braun (Helmholtz-Institut Freiburg für Ressourcetechnologie (HIF) HZDR, Germany) gave a recorded presentation on "Directed evolution biology in resource technology - from the identification of novel inorganic-binding biomolecules to their provision in future".

Then we heard from Maria Dabrowska (University of Warsaw, Poland) with "Sporosarcina globispora and Glutamicibacter protophormiae - two ureolytic strains with high potential in revalorisation of heavy-metals".

In the last presentation before morning coffee, Ishaaq Hajee (University of Cape Town, South Africa) asked, in a recorded presentation, "Can microbially-induced calcite precipitation alleviate the traditional shortcomings of the Co-disposal method?".

Coffee with Zygmunt Sadowski of Wroclaw University of Science
and Technology, Poland
Sadia Ilyas (Hanyang University, Republic of Korea) and
Siti Chaerun (Bandong Institute of Technology, Indonesia

The parallel sessions after coffee were Session 5A, Biomining Microbiology, Molecular Biology, Systems Biology and Synthetic Biology and Session 5B, Biostabilisation, Bioremediation and Ecological Restoration and Biological Mineral Formation and Minerals Exploration, Biogeochemistry and Biosensors. The full programme can be viewed here.

After lunch, as with the previous two days, we were given 1.5 hours to view the posters and exhibition. 

Then, after an afternoon coffee break, it was time to decide on a venue for  IBS 2026 (the 2024 event will be held in Halifax, Canada, in conjunction with COM 2024). The choice was between France and Chile and, as ever, it was up to the delegates to choose. And the winner was... France!

Next up, Axel Schippers (BRG, Germany) gave the closing presentation, entitled "Future prospects for biohydrometallurgy".

Then came the award presentations.

Congratulations to the poster award winners: Douglas Pino Herrera (BRGM, France), Daniela Rios (Linnaeus University, Sweden), Reinier Egas (Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Maria Dąbrowska (University of Warsaw, Poland), Benjamin Monneron-Enaud (Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg, Germany) and Anna Cozzolino (University of Cagliari, Italy).

And congratulations to the oral presentation award winners: Klemens Kremser (University of Natural Resources and Life Science, Austria), Sophie Ullrich (TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Germany), Reinier Egas (Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Babatunde Oladipo (Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa), Anne-Gwénaëlle Guezennec (BRGM, France), Anna Cozzolino (University of Cagliari, Italy), Melissa  Corbett (Curtin University, Australia), Chiamaka Belsonia Opara (Helmholtz Institute Freiberg for Resource Technology, Germany) and Jonovan Van Yken (CSIRO Land and Water / Murdoch University, Australia).

All that was left then was for Elizabeth Watkin to deliver the closing remarks, including thanking Anna Kaksonen for all her efforts in finally bringing this event to fruition. Thanks to Covid it has been 7 years in the planning!

I would like to also offer my thanks to Anna and her team. You all did a fantastic job and it was wonderful to be back with the IBS 'family'. I hope to see as many of you as possible in the UK next June for Biomining '23, and in Canada the year after! There is an album of photos from the conference, so please feel free to download any that you like.


Wednesday, 23 November 2022

Day 2 at IBS 2022

MEI's Amanda reports on Day 2, 22nd November, at the International Biohydrometallurgy Symposium in Perth:

Today began with a keynote presentation from Päivi Kinnunen (VTT, Finland) entitled "Biotechnical value recovery from waste" which detailed the recent developments, opportunities and challenges in the utilization of biohydrometallurgy, alone or in combination with other technologies, for recovering value from waste. 

Päivi was followed by Jana Pinka (G.E.O.S. Ingenieurgesellschaft mBh, Germany), who presented "Recovery of valuable elements from tailings dumps accompanied by environmental remediation - the pilot plant project "ReMiningPlus"", which detailed their research into new methods of extracting zinc and indium from the Davidschact tailings in Freiberg.

Next, we had another keynote presentation, this time from Naoko Okibe (Kyushu University, Japan), on "Biotechnical mine water/process water treatment". Naoke gave an overview of how her group are working to remediate arsenic and manganese via direct or indirect microbiological reactions, as well as reusing waste materials derived from mining-related activities. 

Then Graeme Esslemont (Evolution Mining, Australia) presented, virtually, "Integrated Virtual Curtain and constructed wetland treatment of mine water at Mount Rawdon Gold Mine".

We then broke off for coffee and another chance to talk to people:

Keishi Oyama (Waseda University, Japan) and Phann Idol (Kyushu University, Japan)

Catherine Joulian and Douglas Pino Herrera, of BRGM, France

Michael Schlömann (Freiberg University, Germany)
and Naoko Okibe (Kyushu University, Japan)

After the break presentations were again streamed into parallel sessions. Session 3A was on Biomining of Wastes, Industrial Ecology and Circular Economy, whilst Session 3B was Bioleaching of Metals from Low Grade Ores and Concentrates. A tough choice today, but at least all of the presentations can be assessed online, so I can catch what I missed at another time.

We broke for lunch, and then, as we did yesterday, we had an hour and a half to view the posters, followed by a coffee break before we got back to the oral presentations.

Session 4A was on Biotechnical Treatment and Resource Recovery from Mine and Process Waters, and 4B was another session on Biomining of Wastes, Industrial Ecology and Circular Economy.

This evening, we gathered for the Gala Dinner, which took place in the hotel's Grand Ballroom. 

With Anna Kaksonen of CSIRO, the chair of the International Organising Committee

The evening began with "Roaming Reptiles", giving delegates the opportunity to come face to face with lizards and snakes!

The evening then proceeded with a buffet of delicious foods, whilst delegates' knowledge about Australia was tested with a fun quiz, thanks to quiz-meister extraordinaire, Naomi Boxall, before ending the night with a dance.