Methods to Reduce the Environmental Hazards of Mining and Processing of Minerals in the Arctic Regions

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
V. A. Masloboev D. V. Makarov A. A. Baklanov P. V. Amosov S. G. Seleznev
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
1129 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2016

Abstract

"The development of industry and intensive use of natural resources leads to a significant decrease in the share of reserves of rich ores, deposits of which have nearly all been exploited. Large amounts of displaced rock mass are accumulated, significant emissions of gas and dust from mining, dust from dumps and tailing pits, ingress of chemicals and toxic elements in surface and groundwater all can have negative effects on existing ecosystems and human health. Especially dangerous is the impact in Arctic regions with extreme climate conditions. The maintenance of overburden dumps and tailings dams requires significant capital and material costs. In this paper, some mining enterprises of the Murmansk region, in the Russian Federation, consider the environmental problems of the industry and propose some solutions.INTRODUCTIONThe safety of environment during the extraction and processing of minerals is a very acute problem throughout the whole world. The problem acquires a specific character in the Russian Federation. There, rather poor minerals, often existing in unconventional forms and including several mineral components are processed. The Russian mineral base has a specific geographical location; most of the deposits under operation are located in the Subarctic or Arctic regions, as well as in Siberia and in the Far East. Vast amounts of rock waste and tailings pose serious economic and ecological problems in mining regions. The operation of overburden heaps and tailings requires considerable capital and material costs. The dumps withdraw vast lands from potential commercial use. Large amounts of mined rock disturb the existing geological balance; emissions of gas and dust which accompany the mining operations, dusting of waste heaps and tailings, emissions of reagents and heavy metals into natural surface and ground waters all can produce negative effects on existing ecosystems and human health."
Citation

APA: V. A. Masloboev D. V. Makarov A. A. Baklanov P. V. Amosov S. G. Seleznev  (2016)  Methods to Reduce the Environmental Hazards of Mining and Processing of Minerals in the Arctic Regions

MLA: V. A. Masloboev D. V. Makarov A. A. Baklanov P. V. Amosov S. G. Seleznev Methods to Reduce the Environmental Hazards of Mining and Processing of Minerals in the Arctic Regions. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2016.

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