Dewatering and Dry Disposal of Fine Bauxite Residue
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 591 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1989
Abstract
Alcoa of Australia operates three Alumina refineries in the  South West of Western Australia at Kwinana adjacent to the  South suburbs of Perth and at Pinjarra and Wagerup in rural  settings 100 and 150 kilometres south of Perth respectively (see  Figure 1). Alcoa's total alumina production is currently around  five million tonnes per annum and this will increase to 5.5  million tonnes by early 1990. Further expansion of production is  likely if current world aluminium demand trends continue. Alcoa's refineries utilise bauxite mined in the nearby Darling  Range which is low grade by world standards having around 32 %  by weight extractable alumina (by comparison Weipa bauxite  yields around 55% alumina). This means that for every tonne of  alumina produced two tonnes of solid wastes remain and  therefore while we in Western Australia can boast of hosting the  largest alumina industry in the world with around 18% of total  world production we suffer from having the lion's share or 40%  of the world's bauxite residues to dispose of. In its Western Australian setting the management of these  residues in a manner which is acceptable to the community  creates many challenges. These are primarily due to the mass and  volume of waste produced, its chemical and physical  characteristics and the environmental features of the local area  including close proximity of neighbours, competing land uses  and the presence of natural resources such as surface water and  groundwater. In addition the trend towards more stringent  statutory environmental controls and greater political and  community awareness of environmental issues means that we  must be able to demonstrate improvements that will reduce the  considerable adverse impacts of past practices. Of course we  must also try to keep the overall cost of residue disposal as low as  possible to maintain our competitiveness with refineries which  may have much smaller volumes of waste to dispose of and less  environmental constraints.
Citation
APA: (1989) Dewatering and Dry Disposal of Fine Bauxite Residue
MLA: Dewatering and Dry Disposal of Fine Bauxite Residue. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1989.
