The challenge of cyanide: opportunities and challenges for backfill operations presented by the International Cyanide Management Code (c016848d-6efa-4811-a8e4-a76c65667864)

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
C. L. Reichardt
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
146 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

"Pressure exerted on gold producers by regulators, project financiers, and civil society in the wake of the Baia Mare tailings spill in Romania during 2000 prompted most responsible gold companies to sign up to the International Cyanide Management Code for the Manufacture, Transport, and Use of Cyanide in the Production of Gold (the Code). The Code stipulates a ‘cradle to grave’ approach more comprehensive than that applied to any other mining reagent and poses particular challenges for operators who use cyanide-bearing tailings for backfill. This paper examine some of the challenges for Code compliance facing deep underground gold mines that employ backfill technology, most particularly the requirement to demonstrate that the potential migration of cyanide (and its degradation products) from emplaced backfill will not have an unacceptable impact on worker health and safety or on the receiving environment, either during mine life or after closure.Although the Code only contains a single reference to backfill, more careful consideration confirms that most sections of the Code that deal with tailings management are potentially applicable to mines where tailings material is used for backfill. Certain principles of the Code also pertain to aspects of operations, worker safety, emergency response, training, and dialogue with stakeholders relating to backfilling practice.For gold mines of the Far West Rand, the most significant cyanide-related risks associated with backfill operations relate to worker exposure to cyanide-bearing seepage and HCN gas. There is potential for seepage of cyanide-bearing water from backfill to compromise the beneficial use of surface and groundwater, and thus impact on downstream users and ecosystems. However, the extreme depth of mining and the specific geological and hydrological controls on the Far West Rand suggest that the potential environmental risks associated with backfill are likely to be considerably less significant than the cyanide-related risks to the workforce."
Citation

APA: C. L. Reichardt  (2007)  The challenge of cyanide: opportunities and challenges for backfill operations presented by the International Cyanide Management Code (c016848d-6efa-4811-a8e4-a76c65667864)

MLA: C. L. Reichardt The challenge of cyanide: opportunities and challenges for backfill operations presented by the International Cyanide Management Code (c016848d-6efa-4811-a8e4-a76c65667864). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.

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