Why mine closure matters and why it gets ignored

The Mine Closure Roundtable. From left to right: Alisha Hiyate, moderator and editor of Canadian Mining Journal; Ken Bocking of Golder Associates; Douglas Morrison, CEO of CEMI; and Steven Woolfen, director of environment for Iamgold.The Mine Closure Roundtable. From left to right: Alisha Hiyate, moderator and editor of Canadian Mining Journal; Ken Bocking of Golder Associates; Douglas Morrison, CEO of CEMI; and Steven Woolfen, director of environment for Iamgold.

If you want to clear a room of miners, there are few better ways than to raise the topic of mine closure.

At least, that’s sort of what happened at the Progressive Mine Forum in Toronto in late October. The inaugural event, organized by The Northern Miner, was dedicated to discussing innovation in mining. After a day of roundtables discussing CSR, Big Data in exploration, and innovation in mine development, operations and finance, about half the audience got up and left when it came time for the final topic of the day – mine closure. (Watch the Mine Closure portion of the event starting at 5:01:15.)

While mine closure may not be a sexy topic, it is an urgent one.

“It’s the single most important thing that our industry does,” said Douglas Morrison, president and CEO of the Centre for Excellence in Mining Innovation. “Nobody in the public could care less what our productivity levels are, what the return on investment is. They absolutely care what we do with our waste streams – waste water and solid waste. This is where our industry interacts with the public.”

Continue reading this article at the Canadian Mining Journal website.

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