After a dust-up arose around Newcrest’s Cadia mine in NSW earlier this year, an independent review has deemed the mine’s emissions are within safety guidelines.
After conducting a months-long investigation into vent dust levels at Cadia, the NSW EPA has been presented with a report – commissioned by Newcrest – and run by SAGE Environmental Services. The Human Health Risk Assessment (HHRA), now publicly available, assessed the potential threat to human health in areas surrounding Cadia from January 2022 to February 2023.
According to the report: “potential risks to human health from emissions from CVO is low and acceptable”.
Cadia Valley Operations were found to be non-compliant by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) earlier this year. The report also assessed environmental sample data collected from residential drinking water. And it’s here that things get a bit murky.
The report has shown that lead, matching the signature of Cadia, is present in the rainwater tanks of Orange district residents. After initially claiming otherwise and that there was no way to prove the lead was from the mine, Newcrest is now dealing with the fallout. So-called “lead fingerprinting” allows lead to be tracked to its original source using isotopic signatures, and 40% of tank sludge samples collected by Newcrest belonged to Cadia. The EPA is now “reviewing” the Independent Health Risk Assessment.
While immediately conjuring up the vision of ecological disaster, deep-sea mining could be the least damaging way to provide the world with Critical Minerals. We need an array of rare and essential earths, and as wealthy Western nations look to electrify their grids in record time, supplies are running low. Nickel is a metal where demand wins the battle with supply, and our dwindling resources are increasingly damaging to mine.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the world will need 6.3M tonnes of nickel yearly by 2040. That’s about double what we sourced in 2022.
However, deep underneath the Pacific Ocean, a patch of earth could hold a solution. The Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) is peppered with fist-sized nuggets of nickel, cobalt, manganese and copper.
These undersea “nodules” collectively hold 340M tonnes of nickel alone.
According to the experts, getting at the nodules may be less harmful than the regular chemical leaching process undertaken on land. With undersea minerals also richer, extracting it will require less energy and produce 40% less greenhouse gases in the process. While it’s unlikely to replace grounded nickel mining completely, the rise of Electric Vehicles and battery technology may mean a trip to the deep to get what we need.
The NSW government has unveiled its pathway towards a Critical Minerals and High-Tech Metals strategy. The defined plan hopes to establish industry certainty, shoring up domestic manufacturing, skills and training opportunities. NSW has a wealth of critical minerals and high-tech metals, possessing 17 of the 26 nationally identified elements.
According to the release, the Strategy will explore new opportunities, including to:
Dust suppression is a critical issue in the world of mining and resources.
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https://www.nsw.gov.au/media-releases/new-critical-minerals-strategy
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