Rumble In The Jungle: Lessons Learned From A Waste Rock Dump Failure - SME Annual Meeting 2022

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 198 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 2, 2022
Abstract
A greenfield open pit gold mine in Latin America suspended operations less than three years into an eight-year mine plan after a waste rock dump and heap leach facility sustained substantial damage from a deep-seated landslide. No injuries to employees were recorded because of the slow-moving failure. Due to early detection by the operations team, the owner had sufficient notice of the potential failure and successfully rinsed the heap leach facility prior to the failure event. Engineers estimated approximately 35 million cubic meters of mass movement below the waste rock and heap leach facilities. The original eight-year mine plan produced approximately 60,000 ounces of gold per year. After the failure, the owner terminated gold production, re-configured the mine site to a safe, standby condition and launched a detailed investigation into the root-cause of the failure. Approximately two years after the shutdown, legal interests filed a statement of claim and named three engineering design firms and individuals involved in the project. Several years of litigation, including discovery and deposition proceedings, followed as the legal process considered evidence spanning a 20-year timeline. Changes in project ownership and consulting firms during the development and operations phase complicated the process. In 2017, the plaintiff and last defendant settled. The author was involved as the corporate representative for one of the engineering design firms.
Citation
APA:
(2022) Rumble In The Jungle: Lessons Learned From A Waste Rock Dump Failure - SME Annual Meeting 2022MLA: Rumble In The Jungle: Lessons Learned From A Waste Rock Dump Failure - SME Annual Meeting 2022. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2022.