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Dundee Sustainable Technologies Inc C.DST

Alternate Symbol(s):  DNDDF

Dundee Sustainable Technologies Inc. is engaged in the commercialization of environmentally responsible technologies for the treatment of complex materials from the mining industry. Through the development of patented, proprietary processes, the GlassLock Process and the CLEVR Process, it extracts precious and base metals from ores and concentrates, while stabilizing contaminants, such as arsenic, antimony, and cadmium from ores and concentrates. It has designed, built, and patented a method for the permanent stabilization of arsenic from numerous sources, including arsenopyrite, enargite, cobaltite, flue dusts and environmental remediation. It has demonstrated its GlassLock Process onsite at an operating copper smelting in Namibia, Africa. It has developed an advanced proprietary process for the extraction of precious and base metals using sodium hypochlorite to provide a cyanide-free alternative for the exploitation of gold deposits. The CLEVR Process operates in a fully closed loop.


CSE:DST - Post by User

Post by Alex77on May 01, 2018 9:55pm
80 Views
Post# 27967782

Clean Faro mine: Will they need DST technology

Clean Faro mine: Will they need DST technology
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/faro-mine-remediation-1.4179016

Massive Faro mine clean-up will begin in 2022, two decades after closure

The former lead-zinc mine in Yukon, closed in 1998; cleanup estimated to cost more than $500 million

The tailings dams at the Faro mine. The intermediate dam, second from right, will be raised and strengthened over the next few years. (Yukon Conservation Society)

The federal and Yukon governments say they are on track to begin the Faro mine remediation project in 2022. It will be a massive effort to deal with millions of tonnes of tailings and waste rock, and likely cost more than half a billion dollars.

The two levels of government are in the middle of a consultation process in Yukon on how the remediation should proceed. Reporters were given an update on the mine closure plan on Monday in Whitehorse.

The Faro lead-zinc mine was abandoned by its bankrupt owners in 1998. They left behind a mess that was estimated in 2009 to cost about $500 million to clean up, but is probably more expensive now, said Lou Spagnuolo, project director for Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada.

"It's likely to go up — as inflation and costs go up, those costs will likely go up as well," he said.

The plan will take 10 to 15 years to complete, said Spagnuolo, with ongoing and varying degrees of monitoring continuing indefinitely.

Before any of that begins, though, attention will be on fixing two urgent problems as early as next year, Spagnuolo said.

The north fork of Rose Creek needs to be rerouted around high levels of zinc that are seeping into the creek from piles of waste rock. Also, the intermediate tailings dam needs to be strengthened and raised to meet current regulations for withstanding flooding and earthquakes. 

Federal official Lou Spagnuolo, left, and his territorial counterpart Dustin Rainey, updated reporters at a briefing Monday in Whitehorse. (Dave Croft/CBC)

70 million tonnes of tailings

The biggest cost of the full remediation plan will be covering 320 million tonnes of waste rock and 70 million tonnes of tailings, Spagnuolo said. A department handout says the waste would cover 26,179 football fields, one metre deep.

Spagnuolo said without the work, the Pelly and Yukon Rivers could be polluted with toxic metals.

"As the site degrades, the acid rock drainage will get worse and will leach heavy metals from the rock. So you'll see an increase in zinc levels in particular, is the biggest concern. We're monitoring that site constantly."

While the federal government is paying the bills, the territorial government will oversee the implementation of the remediation plan.

The senior project manager for the territory's department of energy, mines and resources, Dustin Rainey, said it's already in charge of care and maintenance at the mine site.

He said the main job is making sure contaminated water isn't getting into clean water, and treating contaminated water.

Rainey said the treatment plant at the mine site processes about as much water each year as the City of Whitehorse produces.

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