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Thursday, 21 December 2017
Thousands of tonnes of dangerous mining waste dumped in wrong place
Northern Territory government insists no report about resulting
combustion and emissions exists, despite investigating McArthur river
mine
The McArthur river in Borroloola in the Northern Territory. A zinc-lead
mine on the river caused combustion and sulphur-dioxide emissions when
it dumped waste in the wrong place.
Photograph: Helen Davidson for the Guardian
An Australian mine owned by the global trading firm Glencore
mistakenly dumped 63 truckloads of dangerous waste material in the
wrong place, where it combusted and sent sulphur dioxide into the
atmosphere.
The scale of the incident, which occurred at the remote McArthur river zinc-lead mine in Australia’s north,
was kept out of the public eye. The Northern Territory government
ordered an investigation but refuses to release any details, claiming no
report exists because the findings were delivered verbally.
The 63 truckloads of reactive rock – known as potentially
acid-forming (PAF) rock – were never removed. Observers have expressed
concern that even with the remedial work since carried out by the
company, the approaching monsoons could cause another chemical reaction.
The only public admission by the mine operator, McArthur River Mining (MRM), is one paragraph within a draft environmental impact statement running to several thousand pages.
The waste rock, estimated at about 14,000 tonnes, was mistaken for
more benign material, the company admitted, and dumped on the company’s
less secure southern waste facility. It should have gone to the
company’s northern waste dump, which has better containment features.
The company’s impact statement says “the presence of sulphur dioxide
and surface cracking in areas of the [southern waste dump] in 2016 were
detected and an investigation undertaken. It was found that 63
truckloads of PAF ... was incorrectly mined as [moderate risk rock] and
placed on the [southern dump]”.
In a series of contradicting statements and interviews, the NT
Department of Primary Industry and Resources confirmed it had hired an
independent investigator but that the incident prompted no sanctions or
prosecutions because the way MRM’s authorised mine management plan was
written “didn’t exclude them from putting material there”.
The possible environmental damage of the PAF is significant and could include contamination of the river system.
The trucks, similar to this one, carry more than 200
tonnes in each load. 63 truckloads of reactive PAF were taken to the
southern facility. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters
According to the mine’s independent monitor, reactive PAF has a
higher risk of spontaneously combusting if not managed properly and is
“likely to generate excessive heat and produce toxic gases” if it does.
It has the highest capacity to generate acidic and metalliferous
drainage, and must be prevented from being in contact with water and
oxygen.
“If
there are significant chemical reactions in the [southern facility],
this will lead to mobilisation of acid, salts and heavy metals into any
drainage from this waste,” said Gavin Mudd, environmental engineer at
Monash University and chair of the Mineral Policy Institute.
“If water management systems fail, this could potentially lead to
acidic, saline and heavy metal-rich waters entering the McArthur river –
leading to significant risks for biodiversity and humans.”
PAF material is required to be stored in the northern facility where
it can be contained by measures including clay coverings. However, such measures have not always worked. In 2013 a section of the northern pile combusted, resulting in a toxic plume and smouldering for more than a year.
MRM said in its draft EIS that the PAF rock represented 0.24% of the
total mass of the southern waste rock facility, and had “a negligible
impact on the overall acid balance” because of the far greater “acid
consuming capacity” within the pile.
But in 2016 sulphur dioxide emissions were detected at the site and
in early August the then mines minister, David Tollner, announced staff
from his department were investigating.
The sitting Northern Territory
government was then defeated by Labor in the August 2016 election and
no further information about the investigation has ever been released.
The department refused to provide its findings, telling Guardian
Australia the investigation was for “internal purposes”. However, it did
say that McArthur River Mining had “operated in accordance” with its
mine management plan.
It said MRM had undertaken “interim remediation” activities to
compact and cap the material – extracting the oxygen and protecting it
from rain – and there had been no further venting. It later said the
remediation measures could be interim or permanent, because future
management of the waste was now covered by the operator’s draft
environmental impact statement (EIS).
MRM is seeking to expand its operations
beyond the currently scheduled end date of 2018. Its EIS – which
contained the dumping admission – is under public assessment and a
government decision is expected imminently.
The NT department’s head of mines, Armando Padovan, said its mining
authorisation documents – which cover the mine management plans – were
not strong enough to allow prosecution at the time.
“The way the mine management plan was written didn’t exclude [MRM] from putting material there,” Padovan said.
He said the authorisations had been strengthened since the incident,
and suggested prosecution would be an option for the department if the
same thing were to happen again.
Padovan questioned whether the estimated 14,000 tonnes was a significant amount in the context of “a mine of that magnitude”.
“I think if you compare it to a small extractive operation it’s a lot of material, but we’ve got a major mine here.”
Various explanations of the investigator’s findings were given.
The director of mining compliance for the NT government, Roslyn
Vulcano, first said there was no report, then said there was one finding
that was “internal documentation”, but said she had no paperwork about
the investigation on hand. She would not say if she had seen any.
In a subsequent interview requested by the department, Padovan said the findings were delivered verbally.
“This happened over a year ago and a lot has happened since then,” he
said. “What the focus turned to was how to deal with the material, what
was the best way of moving forward.”
In explaining the lack of a report, Padovan said: “We wanted to
quickly move on and deal with how do we address the issue of the
material that’s been placed there. It’s really about allocating
resources, and where the risk is, and how we manage the risk.”
Department staff also gave contradictory statements describing the
investigation variously as internal, independent, and conducted by
McArthur River Mining, and Padovan also questioned the legitimacy of the
inquiry as “a formal investigation”.
Padovan
instead suggested that the fact there was no report defined the
investigation as informal, even though it was conducted by a contracted
independent investigator.
The reactive PAF mistake was at least the second such incident
involving MRM. In 2015, the operator was found to have dumped
moderate-risk waste rock in the southern facility “using techniques no
longer considered best practice”.
In that incident the department found McArthur River Mining had
performed an act of “non-compliance” and ordered the operator to remove
the waste rock, which should have been in another facility. It did not.
Instead the company opted to appeal before the mining advisory committee, which found in favour of its argument
that the southern facility was a “temporary facility necessitated by a
restriction” on dumping volatile rock on the northern pile, which was
being redesigned after the 2014 reclassification found it contained
almost 90% problematic rock, not the 16% previously thought.
Its decision allowed MRM to “maintain all current material” at the
southern waste rock facility until the completion of its environmental
impact assessment.
The advisory committee has been criticised in the past – in
particular at the time of that decision – for being stacked with
representatives from the mining industry.
The McArthur river mine has been extraordinarily divisive in the
community because of repeated alleged environmental contamination on one
hand, and its provision of jobs and other support to the local economy
on the other.
The NT is the only Australian jurisdiction to measure mining
royalties based on profit. Glencore has paid no royalties from the
McArthur river mine for the past two years at least, because, it said,
the system allowed it to make capital investment offsets.
Glencore declined to answer detailed questions or provide a comment, instead directing Guardian Australia to its EIS.
The minister for primary industry and resources, Ken Vowles, declined
requests for interview, and did not answer written questions. In a
statement he said the incident happened under the former government and
at the time the department confirmed MRM had acted within their
management plan.
“The MMP has since been amended. [The department] will continue to
monitor and regulate the MRM site, as they do all mining sites in the
territory.”
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