It never rains but it pours – improving extreme-rainfall resilience in Australia’s iron ore regions

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 585 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 8, 2021
Abstract
The expansive, open cut iron-ore mines in Western Australia typically experience few days of rain
per annum, often amounting to less than 250 mm. Unlike mines where rainfall is frequent, they may
be less prepared for extreme rainfall events. Such events can cause erosion, flooding and
sedimentation, drainage alteration, spoil and stock heaps wetting and effect slope stability. Such
impacts may threaten personnel safety, infrastructure, and production.
The CRATER (‘Climate Related Adaptation from Terrain Evaluation Results’) framework collates
and interprets a mine’s pre-existing data and semi-quantitative information to assess vulnerability to,
and ultimately plan to avoid or minimise, flood-related hazard to infrastructure, people, downtime,
environment and revenue. Outputs assist decision makers to design investment strategies for
minimising mining operations’ vulnerability to climate.
Previously developed for smaller, wetter mines in Queensland’s coal region, the outputs provide a
hot-spot map, fault tree analysis and an assessment of the mine’s capacity to adapt. The multicriteria
evaluation (MCE) within a geographic information system (GIS), equally suits iron-ore mines’ siteconditions
(elevation, slope, drainage, soil and vegetation) to identify critical inundation areas. Hotspot
results provide target zones for in-depth fault-tree analysis that, in turn, present a range of sitespecific
adaptation options.
Rainfall-intensity and the number of rain days since the 1970s have increased over central and
eastern parts of the Pilbara Region. While tropical cyclones may become less frequent, they are
projected to increase in intensity. Although some parts of the Hamersley Ranges receive more than
500 mm per annum, rainfall in the Pilbara is generally very low. Therefore, experience of the impacts
of extreme rainfall events in the constantly changing topography of Western Australia’s iron ore
region may be sparse. Minimising potential effects can be proactively assisted using CRATER.
Citation
APA:
(2021) It never rains but it pours – improving extreme-rainfall resilience in Australia’s iron ore regionsMLA: It never rains but it pours – improving extreme-rainfall resilience in Australia’s iron ore regions. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2021.