Thursday, 31 January 2019

Responsible mining: evidently not in Minas Gerais

Last week's tailings dam breach at the Córrego do Feijão  iron ore mine in Brumadinho, near Belo Horizonte in Minas Gerais state in Brazil, is not only an appalling human tragedy but also a major setback to the international mining industry's bid to improve its image and to promote responsible and sustainable mining.
(Source: Wikipedia)
The Córrego do Feijão mine is one of four in Vale's Paraoeba complex, which includes two processing plants. The complex produced 26 million tonnes of iron ore in 2017, or about 7 percent of Vale's output, with Córrego do Feijão accounting for 7.8 million tonnes.
There have been many tailings dam breaches over the past decades, but Minas Gerais has the worst record, too many serious accidents involving burst tailings dams having occurred in this area. In 2014 three workers were killed when a barrier gave way at a dam belonging to Herculano Mineração, an iron ore mining company. In 2007 heavy rains caused the Mineração Rio Pomba Cataguases bauxite mine to burst leaving 5,000 homeless. In 2001 five workers at the Mineração Rio Verde Ltda iron ore mine were killed when the tailings dam failed.
But only three years ago the Bento Rodrigues dam disaster of November 5, 2015 was then the worst environmental disaster in Brazil's history, killing 19 people when the Fundão iron ore containment dam failed and released 60 million cubic meters of iron ore waste. The mine was operated by Samarco, a joint venture between Vale and BHP.
It is estimated that between one and four breaches occur each year at tailings dams world-wide, roughly 10 times the failure rate of water dams. The largest tailings dams, at copper mines high in the Peruvian Andes, are colossal, already as tall as the Hoover Dam and have permits to rise even further. Unlike water retention dams, a tailings dam is raised in succession throughout the life of the particular mine. Typically, a base or starter dam is constructed, and as it fills with a mixture of tailings and water, it is raised.
The disposal of tailings adds to the production costs so it is necessary to make disposal as cheap and as safe as possible. This requirement led initially to the development of the once commonly used upstream method of tailings dam construction, so named because the centerline of the dam moves upstream into the pond. In this method, a small starter dam is placed at the extreme downstream point and the dam wall is progressively raised on the upstream side. The tailings are discharged by spigoting off the top of the starter dike and, when the initial pond is nearly filled, the dyke is raised and the cycle repeated. Various methods are used to raise the dam; material may be taken from the dried surface of the previously deposited tailings and the cycle repeated, or more commonly, the wall may be built from the coarse fraction of the tailings, separated out by cyclones, or spigots, the fines being directed into the pond.
The upstream method of construction
The main advantages of the upstream construction are the low cost and the speed with which the dam can be raised by each successive dike increment. The method suffers from the disadvantage that the dam wall is built on the top of previously deposited unconsolidated slimes retained behind the wall. There is a limiting height to which this type of dam can be built before failure occurs and the tailings flow out and, because of this, the upstream method of construction is now less commonly used.
Most modern large dams are now constructed using the downstream method, which evolved as a result of efforts to devise methods for constructing larger and safer tailings dams. This method produces safer dams both in terms of static and seismic loading. It is essentially the reverse of the upstream method, in that as the dam wall is raised, the centerline shifts downstream, and the dam remains founded on coarse tailings  Most procedures involve the use of cyclones to produce sand for the dam construction. Downstream dam building is the only method that permits design and construction of tailings dams to acceptable engineering standards. All tailings dams in seismic areas, and all major dams, regardless of their location, should be constructed using some form of the downstream method. The major disadvantage of the technique is the large amount of sand required to raise the dam wall. It may not be possible, especially in the early stages of operation, to produce sufficient sand volumes to maintain the crest of the tailings dam above the rising pond levels. In such cases, either a higher starter dam is required or the sand supply must be augmented with borrowed fill, such procedures increasing the cost of tailings disposal.
The downstream method of construction
Several major failures have involved tailings dams constructed with the upstream method. The subsequent enquiry into the Bento Rodrigues disaster identified that the Fundao dam was constructed using the higher risk upstream method, and sands fractions of tailings were used in the embankment construction. In this case, construction defects in the starter dam, combined with insufficient control of the deposition of sands and slimes fractions over several years left an embankment susceptible to failure. To avoid failure, upstream embankments require considerable control over placement of sand and slimes fractions into the tailings storage facility, and limits to the rate at which the embankment is built up to ensure proper compaction and drainage. Some countries, such as Chile, ban the upstream method due to unacceptable risk of failure especially due to earthquakes. 
The upstream method was also used to construct the dam at Córrego do Feijão , which began taking tailings in 1976 and was closed down three years ago.
Two days ago, although Vale had not confirmed why the dam had collapsed, the company announced that it would decommission all 10 of its tailings dams built using the upstream method, all of which are inactive (MEI Online). Vale says that the decommissioning of the upstream dams will be done safely and quickly, and the company will temporarily halt the production of the units where the structures are located. The operation of the halted units will be resumed as soon as the decommissioning works are completed.
Mining companies have a huge responsibility to design and maintain their dams to acceptable standards. Feed to the dams is from the mineral processing operations, so how can mineral processors do their bit?
Water conservation is now of paramount importance, and as much water as possible is now recycled to the mill, often aided by paste thickening, thus increasing tailings density and reducing the volume of tailings directed to the dams, as well as changing the rheology and the likelihood of failure.
Significant safety improvement with the risk of catastrophic dam failure and tailings runout being eliminated can be achieved by 'dry stacking' where the tailings are dewatered, by vacuum or pressure filtration, to a higher degree than paste, and are then transported by conveyor or truck, deposited, spread and compacted to form a stable deposit.  Dry stack facilities are particularly suited to areas of high seismic activity and areas where there is limited construction material to develop a conventional retention impoundment. Although more expensive than conventional methods of disposal, dry stacking is inherently safer and is advantageous where water conservation is of critical concern.
There is also now much emphasis on selective mining and preconcentration, electronic sorting now being an accepted technique for reducing the quantity of ore processed by grinding and concentration, and in many underground mines a considerable amount of tailings can be mixed with binders to produce backfill, reducing the tonnage sent for surface disposal.
Whatever the eventual outcome of the latest catastrophic dam breach, it is another heartbreaking reminder that tailings have not been central to the sustainability agenda of some of the world's largest mines.

Twitter @barrywills

Tuesday, 29 January 2019

MEI Online Update #430

Hello Everyone,
First off, I need to remind you that the deadline for abstracts for Computational Modelling '19 and Physical Separation '19 is the end of this week. If you would like to submit an abstract but are running late, please contact Barry to let him know. These events will run back-to-back in Falmouth, Cornwall, UK this June.
There is also a Final Call for Papers for Flotation '19. Taking place, as usual, in November in Cape Town at the fantastic Vineyard Hotel, this is the 9th event in a series which just keeps on going from strength to strength. If flotation is your thing then do your best to join us! And if you are interested in exhibiting, please contact Jon asap as there are now only 5 booths left. The exhibition area is integral to this event - the welcome reception, and all lunches and coffee breaks are held there. See the diagram to the right.

"It is now widely accepted that this series of Conferences are 'must attend' events for both flotation researchers and practitioners. The great value of attending the Conference is that it provides an excellent forum for an exchange of views among those doing more fundamental research and those from industry who are able to share their successes and challenges with the audience."
Cyril O'Connor, IMPC Chairman
And I mustn't forget that there is a First Announcement of Hi-Tech Metals '20 and Process Mineralogy '20, which will take place back-to-back in October 2020 in Cape Town, South Africa.
We have had a couple more sponsors join us in the last few weeks. I announced in the last newsletter that regular MEI Conferences sponsor, Zeiss, are sponsoring Flotation '19, and now they have also signed up as sponsors of Comminution '20, Process Mineralogy '20, and Hi-Tech Metals '20.
I'm also very pleased to be able to announce that Hudbay Minerals are sponsoring Physical Separation '19, Flotation '19, and Comminution '20. This is the first time that Hudbay Minerals have sponsored an MEI conference so a big thank you from us all!
Best regards,
Amanda
linkedin.com/amandawills
facebook.com/MEIConferences
Twitter @MEIChat
Computational Modelling '19

Minerals Engineering Conferences
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Final Call for Papers: Computational Modelling '19
* Final Call for Papers: Physical Separation '19
* Call for Papers: Flotation '19
* First Announcement: Comminution '20
* First Announcement: Biomining '20
* First Announcement: Sustainable Minerals '20
* First Announcement: Hi-Tech Metals '20
* First Announcement: Process Mineralogy '20

Analytical Techniques & Applied Mineralogy
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Process Mineralogy '20
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Hydrometallurgy Vol.182

Analytical Techniques & Applied Mineralogy is sponsored by FEI

Biotechnology
~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Biomining '20
* Conference Announcement: International Biohydrometallurgy Symposium (IBS) 2019
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Hydrometallurgy Vol.182

Comminution
~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Comminution '20
* Conference Report: CEEC Mt.Isa Workshop
* CEEC Medal Applications Open
* Metso Completes the Divestment of its Grinding Media Business to Moly-Cop
* Crush It! Challenge - Develop the Next Generation of Mining
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Powder Technology Vol.342

Comminution is sponsored by Russell Mineral Equipment

Computer Applications
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Computational Modelling '19
* New Powder Calibration Report Provides Guidelines for Simulation of Powder Handling Processes Using Discrete Element Modeling
* Even More Particles, Faster with EDEM 2019
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Chemical Engineering and Processing - Process Intensification Vol.135

Environmental Issues
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Sustainable Minerals '20
* Russian Project Aims to Clean up Smelting
* Mineworx Joint Venture with Enviroleach Begins Second Phase of Electronic Waste Concentration Plant
* Recently Refereed Publications:
Journal of Cleaner Production Vol.210
Hydrometallurgy Vol.182, 2018

Froth Flotation
~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Flotation '19
* Flotation ’19: Call for Abstracts
* Recently Refereed Publications:
Powder Technology Vol.342
Chemical Engineering and Processing - Process Intensification Vol.135
Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects Vol.562
Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects Vol.561
Froth Flotation is sponsored by FLSmidth

General Minerals Engineering
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Hi-Tech Metals '20
* Conference Announcement: BMPC 2019 (XVIIIth Balcan Mineral Processing Congress)
* Conference Announcement: IMPC-EURASIA 2019
* Conference Report: CRC Ore Annual Assembly 2018
* The Launching of the Latest SME Mineral Processing Handbook

Gravity Concentration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Physical Separation '19
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Powder Technology Vol.342

Hydrometallurgy
~~~~~~~~~~~
* First Announcement: Biomining '20
* Conference Announcement: International Biohydrometallurgy Symposium (IBS) 2019
* Development of E3 Metals’ Extraction Technology Improves Lithium Concentration and Recovery
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Hydrometallurgy Vol.182

Magnetic/Electrical Separation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Physical Separation '19
* 2018 Marks a Record Year of Sales for Eddy Current Separators

Materials Handling
~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Metso Ships First Batch of Valves with 3D Printed Parts

Reagents
~~~~~~
* BASF and Guangdong Provincial Government Sign Framework Agreement to Establish Verbund Site in Zhanjiang, China
* Recently Refereed Publication:
Hydrometallurgy Vol.182

Reagents is sponsored by Axis House

Sizing, Classification & Sorting
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Physical Separation '19
* FLSmidth: Completely Re-engineered Trommel Chassis and Screen Media Package

Solid-Liquid Separation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Call for Papers: Physical Separation '19

Solid-Liquid Separation is sponsored by FLSmidth

Plant Operations
~~~~~~~~~~~
* FLSmidth to Expand Hindalco’s Alumina Refinery in Odisha, India
* Zambia’s Largest Manganese Smelter Under Construction by Chinese Firm
* Nordic Gold Completes 1,234 Ounce First Pour
* Jubilee Secures More Chrome Processing Capacity
* ABB Gearless Mill Drive & Digital Services Help Increase Production by 50% at Kinross Tasiast
* Copper Miner Collahuasi Plans $3.2 Billion Investment to Boost Production
* Alba Starts Biggest Furnace in its History
* MACA to Refurbish Adaman’s Kirkalocka Gold Project in Western Australia
* Roxgold Announces Under Budget Completion of Bagassi South Project
* Advanced Milling Control System Yields Productivity Increase at the Asanko Gold Mine

Plant Operations News Australasia is sponsored by Magotteaux

Plant Operations News Europe is sponsored by Holman-Wilfley

People News
~~~~~~~~
* Dr. Ying Gu (1956-2019)
* Major Chinese Award to Prof. Jan Miller
* Dr. Zhiyong Gao Becomes Youngest Vice-Dean at Central South University, China
* Prof. Janusz Laskowski Honoured by Special Journal Issue
* SMI PhD Student Presents at Falling Walls Lab Australia
* Join the Minerals Engineers LinkedIn Group
People News Australia is sponsored by JKMRC & JKTech

Commodities
~~~~~~~~~
New items in:
* Aluminium - News
* Aluminium - Refereed Publications
* Copper - News
* Copper - Refereed Publications
* Diamond - News
* Gold - News
* Gold - Refereed Publications
* Iron - Refereed Publications
* Lithium - News
* Lithium - Conference Announcements
* Manganese - News
* Phosphates - Refereed Publications
* Platinum Group Metals - Refereed Publications
* Quartz - Refereed Publications
* Rare Earths & Thorium - News
* Rare Earths & Thorium - Refereed Publications
* Tungsten - Refereed Publications
* Uranium - Conference Announcements
* Zinc - News
* Zinc - Refereed Publications
* Zirconium - Refereed Publications



Monday, 28 January 2019

Should journal reviewers be rewarded for their efforts?

Way back in 2011 I asked journal authors for their opinions on the peer-review process. Overwhelmingly the response was very positive- the system has some deep flaws but it is essential for the advancement of science. I wonder if researchers feel the same way eight years on. Are there any issues with the new editorial structure of Minerals Engineering for example?
Very few correspondents suggested that reviewers should be financially rewarded for their time, the feeling being that self-respecting scientists would agree that being part of the peer-review process should be a responsibility of any serious scientist, and part of the job description of a researcher.
However, reviewing a paper can be a time-consuming process. According to results from a 2015 survey conducted jointly by Elsevier’s Customer Insights team and the Publishing Research Consortium, researchers spend a mean time of more than a full working day on reviewing a single manuscript while the modal number of manuscripts reviewed per month is 1-2. It goes without saying that the least journals can do is to demonstrate their appreciation for such an invaluable effort in some way.

I'm not sure that everyone is aware that Elsevier launched “My Elsevier reviews profile” on Elsevier’s Reviewer Recognition Platform in April 2014 with the aim of making peer review a measurable research output. On these private profiles referees can see the list of Elsevier journals for which they have reviewed during the past five years and collect:
• Review certificates associated to their status based on the number of submitted reviews per journal
• A yearly overview of their peer review performance
• Their signature, listing journals for which they have acted as referees
• Vouchers for Elsevier books and article publication services
My Elsevier reviews” profile gets automatically updated each time a referee submits a referee report via one of Elsevier’s journal submission systems, removing the need for manually logging and claiming activities. Access to the private profile page is via means of an encrypted hyperlink, sent to the reviewer by email.
Reviewers who complete just one review in a two-year time period can download a certificate for 'Recognised Reviewer' and those who are in the top 10% become 'Outstanding Reviewers'. See below for my examples (I have refereed only one paper for Hydrometallurgy, and the same for IJMP).

The only financial reward is that reviewers can claim 25% discount and free shipping on Elsevier's print and e-books, and 10% discount on article- , illustration- , translation- and language editing services.
What do you think? Does this incentive provide sufficient acknowledgement of the time spent on reviewing? Do you feel that rewarding reviewers in this way is not necessary, as peer-review should be seen as a reciprocal arrangement between researchers, an essential part of every worker's remit?
Twitter @barrywills

Saturday, 26 January 2019

Ying Gu, 1956-2019

There was sad news reported this week (MEI Online), of the death of Dr. Ying Gu, the creator of the Mineral Liberation Analyser (MLA), which for many years was the competitor to CSIRO's QEM*SEM (later QEMSCAN). These were the forerunners of the modern automated mineral analysers which have played such an important role in how the minerals industry has adapted to the challenges of increasingly complex ore bodies.
Ying with the MLA
Ying played a prominent role in five of MEI's mineralogy conferences, and he spent nearly 20 years with Australia's JKMRC and JKTech, responsible both for the MLA development, sales and support, and latterly made important contributions to the technology of X-ray tomography for mineral texture analysis. He was President of the International Congress for Applied Mineralogy (ICAM) from 2008-2011.
Ying at ICAM '11 with Chris Rule and Robert Schouwstra
Ying was a true pioneer of automated mineralogy, who will be sorely missed. Our thoughts are with his wife Wenqin Li and two young daughters.

Friday, 25 January 2019

16th European Symposium on Comminution and Classification

Dear Comminution & Classification Colleagues,

The next European Symposium on Comminution & Classification (ESCC) will take place at the University of Leeds, UK. We have great pleasure in organising the event on behalf of the Working Party of the European Federation of Chemical Engineering (EFCE). ESCC has a long international history, and the last three conferences were held at Braunschweig, Gothenburg, and Izmir. As a long-standing member of the Working Party, representing the Institution of Chemical Engineers of UK, we are delighted to organise this important international conference and welcome the worldwide community to Leeds.

The conference structure is in line with the format of the previous events and will cover themes on foods, pharmaceuticals, mineral processing, fine and ultrafine grinding in the chemical and allied industries, fundamentals of breakage and comminution models as well as new applications. We will have plenary and keynote lectures from leading comminution and classification experts from all over the world, poster sessions and exhibitions by instrument manufacturers. ESCC is a focussed forum in which you have the opportunity to discuss current trends in this area and learn from other industries and can transfer knowledge to your own applications.

Invitation to participate in European Symposium on Comminution & Classification 

You are cordially invited to come to Leeds in 2019 to be part of the ESCC, which will bring together experts of comminution and classification technology from industry and academia worldwide.

Professor Mojtaba Ghadiri, Conference Chair

Please click here to download the first pdf circular

Recent Comments

There have been comments on the following postings since the last update:

Day 2 of Hi-Tech Metals '18 and the end of a great week at the Vineyard
Process Mineralogy '18 welcome reception follows from Zeiss Workshop
A few simple questions for climate scientists
Travels in Peru
Process Mineralogy '18: conference diary
Hi-Tech Metals '18: conference diary
Return to Chingola
Is CO2 the most maligned gas in history?
The importance of mineral processing: the message just isn't getting through
In memory of Peter Fiore, an Nchanga legend
2018 with MEI
Looking forward to 2019
We welcome Master Magnets as a sponsor of Physical Separation '19
Pleasant surprises at the first Cornish Mining Sundowner of the year

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