/
Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustainable Development in Mining and Minerals Sector Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustainable Development in Mining and Minerals Sector

Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustainable Development in Mining and Minerals Sector - PowerPoint Presentation

enkanaum
enkanaum . @enkanaum
Follow
351 views
Uploaded On 2020-08-29

Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustainable Development in Mining and Minerals Sector - PPT Presentation

Lee JiHyun September22 nd 2010 Beijing PRC Contents Introduction Policies and legislation Planning Practice Case Conclusion Introduction characteristics of the mining industry in ID: 810970

act mining environment prevention mining act prevention environment abandoned mines pollution reclamation hazard government section laws waste refinery soil

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download The PPT/PDF document "Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustai..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Brief Case Study: Environment and Sustainable Development in Mining and Minerals Sector in the Republic Of Korea (ROK)

Lee Ji-Hyun September.22nd 2010 Beijing, PRC

Slide2

Contents

IntroductionPolicies and legislation PlanningPractice Case

Conclusion

Slide3

Introduction characteristics of the mining industry in

S.Korea

Minerals development encouraged from 1960 to 1980.

However, limited reserves of mineral resources

And the depletion of natural resources and decreasing price have caused the voluntary closure of non-economical mines and a reduction in mine production since 1990.

Most are ‘medium–scale mining operators’ -> difficult to implement environmental best practice

Weakness

Opportunity

Relatively recently economical importance of minerals and mining recognized again

: the price of minerals in international market has been increased .

Changes in awareness and policy on environment : GDP increased, Regulations and laws related

to

environment

Slide4

Policies and legislation Sustainable Development Policy in mining & mineral sector

The Mine Pollution Prevention and Reclamation Act was enacted on May 31st, 2005, and the Mine

reclamation corporation was established in June 2006 to actively promote the mine reclamation project in closed mining areas.

Purpose of enactment :

1

. Most of mines in

S.Korea were abandoned - severe environment and human health impacts. : As of 2005, inactive or abandoned mines accounts for

64% of whole mines. Companies no longer operating. : Harmful waste water containing such heavy metals as iron, aluminum, arsenic, and cadmium are being discharged from abandoned pits and waste stone and tailing dumping sites following the closure of mines.

-> Led to a push for national actions for mine-hazard prevention

Source:

Korea Institute for Geosciences and Mineral Resources, 2005,

Present Status of Abandoned Mines

Slide5

2. Related laws and regulations were scattered and there was overlap on implementation by different departments -> need for unified mgt. system

[Before]

Survey on land contamination

Waste stone, waste water, ground subsidence, abandoned equipment, plant and buildings

Waste stone, waste water, ground subsidence, abandoned equipment, plant and buildings

,

Restoration of Forest and Land

Ministry of Knowledge & Economy :

[After]

Soil

Remediation

Slide6

Regulations and Laws on Mining and Mine Reclamation  

Regulation and

Laws

(

From 1980 to 2005)

Since 2006

The Mine

Safety Act

The Coal Industry Act Other Environment Laws and Regulations:

The

Soil Environment Conservation 

Act

;

The

noise

 and vibration control 

Act;

The

 wastes control Act

; The  water quality and ecosystem conservation Act

The Agricultural Land Act

The Forest ActThe Mine Safety ActThe Prevention

of Mine Pollution and Reclamation Act

Slide7

Overview of the Prevention of mine pollution and reclamation Act 1

** ‘Mine hazard’(mine pollution) is defined in related laws; the mining act, the mining safety act, the coal industry act,

The Soil

 

Environment

 

Conservation 

Act, The Prevention of Mine Pollution and Reclamation Act**: According to the definition of laws, mining hazard is negative impacts on the environment and on human health that mining operations can lead to; such as land degradation, drainage from mining sites, including acid mine drainage and pumped mine water, dust emissions from sites close to living areas or habitats

: Furthermore, The prevention of mine pollution and reclamation Act defines mining hazard containing social environment impact

such as creating unsightly views or becoming a crime-ridden district since its abandonment.

-

Legal obligation for government to put forward national action for prevention of mine hazard

: legal obligation for mine operator is dismissed after three years from when the ‘mining right’ is expired. Then the government has legal obligation for abandoned mines in this case, and also in case of mine operator pass away or losing financial ability etc. (Article3)

Slide8

Overview of the Act 2

The share in

expense for prevention of mine hazard

(Article

24) : : Mine operator shall deposit a share for prevention of mine hazard every year during mining operation. It will be spent for rehabilitation after mine closure**Obligor of prevention of mine hazard(article 2): mining right holder and

mining concession right holder .

**Government subsidy regulated in the Special Account for Energy and Resouce Act, Article 5, in the Coal Industry Act (Article 27), in the Nature Protection Act (Article 49)

Slide9

.

Planning for implementation of policy :

General planning for prevention of mine hazards (2007~2011)

-According to the article 7 of the Prevention of Mine Pollution

and Reclamation

Act, the ROK government designs general planning every five years

Overview of

the Act 3

Slide10

Practices Initial Phase : Location of mining activites

- Mining operations required to undertake an Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) according to the Act on EIA Operational phase -

Coal Mine

Metal

Mine

Non

Metal mine

Sub-totalTotal

Total

349

988

669

1,657

2,006

Operational

Mine

9

52

669

721730

Abandoned Mine

34093609361,276

Slide11

Status of prevention of mine hazard for recent years

Prevention

of

waste stone

Prevention

of

tailing sweeping

Prevention

of

ground subsidence

Remediation

of

water quality

Remediation

of

soil

Prevention

of

noise and vibration

Clean-up

of

Abandoned

equipment

and plants

Restoration of

forest

Post

closure mgt.

Compensation

for

mine damage

2006

-

-

16

6

-

-

3

11

-

-

2007

40

14

27

25

33

54

26

25

15

3

2008

27

19

35

29

54

26

9

37

19

-

2009

8

19

35

20

74

11

9

28

15

-

Total

75

52

113

80

161

91

47

101

49

3

Slide12

Recent case of mining hazard in ROK

Jang-hang Refinery (copper)- Impact on residents around the refinery: Among residents, began to claim their cancer is caused by cadmium leaked by the refinery (1998)

- JH refinery closed its smelting furnace in 1989 because of environment impacts such as cadmium emissions and increasing environmental expenses .

-For about ten years, local government did not recognise claims of local communities.

But, after Seo-cheon News newspaper, reported severe public health impacts from the refinery, it became a nationwide issue.

Central government started to implement a precise survey on residents health status.

After

its results came out in 2009, the government put forward measures for residents health and remediation of soil around the refinery.

: I

The town of Jang-hang is located in Seo-cheon County in South Chung-chung Province.

Slide13

Detailed Measure

Purchase polluted lotsㆍ

Based on the soil precision survey, purchase soil centering around the section that was polluted by heavy metals and also polluted by multi materials.

Purify polluted lots

Divide into the section not to be purchased and the section to be purchased, purify them but the section not to be purchased shall be purified first.

Purification expenses shall be shared according to the pollution causing rate of the institutions that manage the

Janghang refinery.

Designate a soil preservation measure region

Designate a pollution source section with the radius of around 1.5 km such as a section where tolerance standards on heavy metal residues in agricultural products(rice) are exceeded. (excluding factory regions).

Enforce the migration of residents

Enforce the migration of residents who reside within the section to be purchased.

- Enforce compensation for prohibition on farming.

Enforce rewards for a pollution source section with the radius of around 1 km where farming is prohibited since the heavy metal residues in agricultural products exceed the tolerance standard.

Slide14

Conclusion The mechanism for environmentally sustainable development in mining and mineral sector in South Korea is government-oriented.

Even mining operators have a responsibility to incorporate environment sustainabliltiy into their operation according to the laws, many of them are smaller scale mining and have less capability to afford shared expenses and low technology and skill. Also, many of mines in South Korea are inactive or abandoned , but it is rarely possible to find the previous mine operators and owners.

Therefore, government, particularly the Ministry of Knowledge

and

Economcy and the Korea Mines Reclamation Corporation take on responsibilty.

However, its budget is not sufficient to inspect mine hazards on a national scale and conduct the projects for prevention and reclamation management. The agena for the future is for the development and improvement of technology to manage and mitigate mine hazards during operations and address the rehabilitation of contaminated sites. Also to use systems such as GIS for completing an inventory of abandoned mines and damages.