Status and Causes of Ecological Imbalance of Abandoned Ionic-Type Rare Earth Mine in South China

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 709 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2014
Abstract
This paper summarizes the ecological imbalance status of abandoned rare-earth element (REE) mines in southern China. These include large areas of vegetation damage, serious water and soil erosion, landslides, mudslides, heavy metal pollution, water pollution, soil contamination, and fluorine pollution. The causes which lead to the ecological imbalances at abandoned rare-earth mines are analyzed, such as: the inadequacies of using vat leaching, heap leaching, and in-situ leaching processes to extract REE resources; low mineral thickness and low grade of REE ore; and low utilization rates of the resource. Southern ionic REE resources are not fully integrated, with limited access and ineffective supervision of REE mining by relevant departments. The ecological recovery research for ionic-type REE mines is lagging behind, and there is no deployable ecological restoration method for REE wasteland. In the end, the following suggestions are made to improve the ecological imbalance status of rare-earth mine in southern China: develop new rare-earth extraction processes, accelerate the integration pace of REE resources, increase investment in ecological restoration research in rare-earth wasteland, and so on.
Citation
APA:
(2014) Status and Causes of Ecological Imbalance of Abandoned Ionic-Type Rare Earth Mine in South ChinaMLA: Status and Causes of Ecological Imbalance of Abandoned Ionic-Type Rare Earth Mine in South China. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.