An Environmental Collaborative Research Program ù Field Studies Contributing to the Sustainability of Ne w ZealandÆs Mineral Industry

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
T Clemens D Trumm
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
128 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

Adopting environmentally acceptable practices in New Zealand is a crucial requirement for mineral wealth development. Recent planned expansions in the coal and gold industry have increasingly placed mining in the media spotlight. A lack of appropriate standard environmental guidelines has resulted in inconsistent responses and assessments of current and proposed mines. These inconsistencies have lead to delays in decisions on developing economic mineral deposits that may have only minor short-term impacts, and have also allowed unacceptable environmental management practices to continue elsewhere. A research collaboration between CRL Energy, Landcare Research, University of Canterbury and University of Otago aims to provide regulator groups and the mining industry with a unified approach to the requirements of the Resource Management Act 1991,the legislation that largely drives the nationÆs environmental policies and guidelines. The tangible outcome of this research program will be water quality and impact management guidelines integrated into a decision-making framework. The result of this unification will assist in the development of viable mineral deposits and minimise environmental impacts. The framework will be derived from a synthesis of three objectives. Objective 1 identifies potential water quality impact. This objective is based on a targeted geochemical study of the lithology and waterways of the West Coast and Southland regions. Objective 2 categorises the degree of impacts on the ecology of receiving aquatic ecosystems and determines the processes that drive aquatic ecosystem recovery. Objective 3 identifies best strategies to sufficiently manage impacted ecosystems, and to prevent future unacceptable impacts. Wide consultation with representatives of the mining industry and regulator groups will occur frequently during the development stages of the framework. It is anticipated that this multidisciplinary approach will provide a robust and coherent, standardised system that will assist in achieving industry and environmental targets.
Citation

APA: T Clemens D Trumm  (2004)  An Environmental Collaborative Research Program ù Field Studies Contributing to the Sustainability of Ne w ZealandÆs Mineral Industry

MLA: T Clemens D Trumm An Environmental Collaborative Research Program ù Field Studies Contributing to the Sustainability of Ne w ZealandÆs Mineral Industry. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2004.

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