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From Production to Sustainability Reporting -- Towards Quantifying Sustainable Gold Mining

机译:从生产到可持续性报告 - 朝往量化可持续的金矿

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Gold mining in Australia and globally has a long and variable history. In recent years, due to ongoing public concern over long-term environmental impacts, the mining industry globally has been moving towards a more sustainable framework, presented as the 'Mining, Minerals and Sustainable Development' (MMSD) framework at the Johannesburg Earth Summit in 2002. There are a number of fundamental issues and concerns with assessing the sustainability of mining. Firstly, long-term trends show that ore grades for almost all metals and minerals will continue to decline (some rapidly so), increasing waste rock is being produced due to the trend towards large-scale open cut mining and more complex ores are now commonly being developed. The impact of these trends on the resource intensity, or unit cost, of gold production is of major concern as it could lead to an increase in energy, water and reagent consumption and greenhouse emissions per unit gold produced. A detailed compilation of these fundamental sustainability indices for gold mining has been undertaken, and is presented with respect to indices over time, ore grade and ore throughput. A clear observation is that the resource intensity of gold mining is extremely sensitive to the ore grade, with energy, water and cyanide consumption and greenhouse emissions rising significantly as ore grade decreases. Based on the gold ore resources at operating mines and other known gold deposits, it is most likely that the average gold ore grade will continue to decline, leading to increased resource intensity and consequent environmental impacts (assuming no breakthrough new technologies occur). These findings are of major importance to understanding the sustainability of gold mining. The final judgement of the sustainability of gold mining therefore must take into account the sensitivity of the ore grade in the resource intensity of gold production.
机译:澳大利亚的金矿和全球有一个漫长而变量的历史。近年来,由于持续的公众关注长期的环境影响,全球采矿业一直走向更可持续的框架,作为“约翰内斯堡地球峰会的”矿产,矿产和可持续发展“(MMSD)框架(MMSD)框架呈现为更可持续的框架2002年。评估采矿的可持续性存在许多基本问题和担忧。首先,长期趋势表明,几乎所有金属和矿物质的矿石等级将继续下降(一些迅速所以),由于大规模开放采矿的趋势,增加了废物岩石,现在通常是复杂的矿石正在开发中。这些趋势对金产量的资源强度或单位成本的影响是主要关注,因为它可能导致能源,水和试剂消费量增加,每单位黄金的温室排放量。已经进行了详细汇编金矿的基本可持续发展指标,并在随着时间的推移,矿石等级和矿石吞吐量的指标上提出。明确的观察是,金矿的资源强度对矿石等级极其敏感,能源,水和氰化物消费和温室排放随着矿石等级的降低而上升。根据经营矿山和其他已知金矿床的金矿资源,最有可能继续下降,导致资源强度提高,随之而来的环境影响(假设没有突破新技术)。这些调查结果具有重要意义,以了解金矿的可持续性。因此,最终判断金挖掘可持续性必须考虑到金生产资源强度的矿石等级的敏感性。

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    《World Gold conference》|2007年||共11页
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    G M Mudd;

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  • 中图分类 TF831-532;
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