The Economic and Environmental Case for Recovering Cyanide from Gold Plant Tailings (ABSTRACT PAGE)

- Organization:
- International Mineral Processing Congress
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 100 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
"Interest in the recovery of cyanide from gold and silver plant tailings has heightened in recent years. This interest has been spurred by several factors:Increasingly stringent regulations throughout the gold producing world, governing discharge limits for free and total cyanide to tailings ponds and the environment.The increasing cost of active chemical treatment versus passive (natural degradation) treatment of tailing, to bring them in line with environmental regulations.The worldwide trend to processing of more complex gold ore bodies, which is usually accompanied by higher levels of cyanide consumptions and greater concentrations of cyanide (particularly the copper cyanide complex) in tailings.The growing negative perception of the general public for the gold mining industry, due to several highly publicized cyanide spills in recent years (breaches of tailings dams, accidents involving trucks carrying cyanide to gold plants, etc.).The ability to recover cyanide from gold plant tailings has been known almost as long as the cyanidation process has been practiced, but there has been little incentive to process tailings in this way in the past. With the development of technologies that make it possible to recover and recycle free or complexed cyanide directly from gold plant slurry tailings, which indicates, on paper at least, the potential for significant cost savings compared to cyanide destruction, coupled with the introduction of legislation to seriously limit the discharge of cyanide to the environment in most gold-producing regions of the world, many companies are evaluating the cyanide-recovery alternative."
Citation
APA:
(2003) The Economic and Environmental Case for Recovering Cyanide from Gold Plant Tailings (ABSTRACT PAGE)MLA: The Economic and Environmental Case for Recovering Cyanide from Gold Plant Tailings (ABSTRACT PAGE). International Mineral Processing Congress, 2003.