Integrating Environmental Impact Assessment into Life-of-Mine Planning
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 9
 - File Size:
 - 999 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jul 10, 2012
 
Abstract
"The requirement for environmental approvals and associated environmental impact assessments (EIAs) is now commonly regarded as a key milestone and body of work during project development. EIAs can be undertaken at various phases during project development, generally either:\  during the scoping or prefeasibility studies, where limited project   information is available and the mitigation and management measures of the EIA   become a set of criteria and commitments that control project design  during the feasibility study, as an iterative approach whereby mitigation   and management measures are developed through an integrated process with the   engineering team, and measures are included in the feasibility study cost   model  following the feasibility study, where detailed project design information   is available, the cost model is complete, and the EIA is an assessment of a   fixed project with limited opportunities for mitigation and management   measures to be integrated into engineering design.  This paper investigates the advantages of integrating EIA into life-of-mine planning during the feasibility study phase, using the Tampakan Copper-Gold Project (the Project) as a case study. The Tampakan Project is located in the Philippines on the southern island of Mindanao. The Project involves the proposed development of three main areas of infrastructure:a large-scale, open pit   copper-gold mine and associated mine site infrastructure (including tailings   and mine waste storages, fresh water dam, concentrator, etc)  a power station, port and filter plant (PPFP), located approximately 60 km   from the mine  a pipeline and transmission line linking the mine and PPFP sites.Examples of engineering measures developed through an iterative process to mitigate and manage predicted environmental and social impacts include design of water management infrastructure, modification of the disturbance footprint (eg roads realigned to avoid critical habitat) and realignment of project infrastructure to minimise impacted water catchments.CITATION:Blunt, J and Jones, J, 2012. Integrating environmental impact assessment into life-of-mine planning, in Proceedings Life-of-Mine 2012 , pp 143-152 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne)."
Citation
APA: (2012) Integrating Environmental Impact Assessment into Life-of-Mine Planning
MLA: Integrating Environmental Impact Assessment into Life-of-Mine Planning. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2012.