IC 9196 Water Use In The Domestic Nonfuel Minerals Industry

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Choon Kooi Quan
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
67
File Size:
27056 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

Water availability is essential for mining and minerals processing. To provide government and industry with recent data for water use planning and management, the Bureau of Mines canvassed a number of U.S. producers of nonfuel minerals to determine their water use in 1984. Data were analyzed and compared with previously published data in order to examine historical trends in water utilization in the nonfuel minerals industry and to estimate water requirements in the year 2000. Total water use in the domestic nonfuel minerals industry during 1984 was estimated at 2,267 billion gal, of which 571 billion gal was new water and 1,696 billion gal recirculated water. The largest users of water were the phosphate rock, iron ore, copper, sand and gravel, and crushed stone industries, together accounting for almost 90% of total used. More than one-half of all water was used in Florida, Michigan, and Minnesota. In the year 2000, total water use will amount to an estimated 2,679 billion gal, of which 810 billion gal will be new water and 1,869 billion gal recirculated water. Most of this water would be used in producing the foregoing suite of minerals,
Citation

APA: Choon Kooi Quan  (1988)  IC 9196 Water Use In The Domestic Nonfuel Minerals Industry

MLA: Choon Kooi Quan IC 9196 Water Use In The Domestic Nonfuel Minerals Industry. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1988.

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