Treatment for Wastewater in Open-pit Mines

Mar 29, 2012

Together with the Technical University Bergakademie Freiberg Siemens has developed plants for the treatment of wastewater in open-pit mines, which make the ore extraction process more environmentally friendly. As the operators can reuse the treated water, the mine requires less water.

The wastewater produced by mines is in parts very acidic which contributes to the extraction of metals. The processing plant can treat the most part of the mine's wastewater. A pilot plant for the new treatment technology is installed at a copper mine in Chile.
 
Everyday, copper mines use tens of thousands of cubic meters of water - some mines even use over one hundred thousand. This corresponds to the water consumption of a medium sized city. Many mines cannot expand their production because they do not have enough water. Mine operators in Chile are building desalination facilities for sea water and are pumping the valuable water from the coast to the mining regions, which are located at an altitude of 3,000 meters. The wastewater is used to transport fine grain residues to big reservoirs. Increasing water shortages and stringent environmental regulations are forcing mine operators to think about treating and reusing the wastewater.
 
Siemens is exploiting this trend and is transferring tested processes from the treatment of drinking water to the mines. In the mobile pilot plant, the contaminated water is passed through two treatment stages: First a micro filters remove particles that are bigger than a thousandth of a millimeter. In the next stage - nanofiltration - the water is passed through a membrane with nanopores so that nearly all pollutants are separated from the water. What is left is pure water of a high quality and a concentrated solution of the contaminants, which must then be disposed of.
 
The throughput of the pilot plant is nearly 100 cubic meters of water per day - a fraction of the wastewater produced by a mine. Siemens uses the plant to demonstrate the process and to analyze the wastewater produced by a mine, as the composition of each mine's wastewater is different. The data gained by the pilot plant serves as the foundation for the design of the actual treatment facility.
 
Siemens has been cooperating with the Technical University Bergakademie Freiberg for some years to research innovative concepts for the treatment of wastewater from mines. As the company with the largest environmental portfolio worldwide, which generated sales of approximately €30 billion in fiscal 2011, Siemens can and will make a major contribution in this area.

Contact

Siemens AG

Dr. Norbert Aschenbrenner

Wittelsbacherplatz 2

80333 München

Germany

Phone:

+49 (0) 89 / 636-45899

E-Mail:

norbert.aschenbrenner@siemens.com

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