Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Chile tests floating solar panels to power mine, conserve water

- PATRICIA LUNA

SANTIAGO, CHILE A floating island of solar panels is being tested in Chile as a way to generate clean energy and reduce water loss at mine operations, a cornerston­e of the Andean country’s economy that uses huge amounts of electricit­y and water.

The experiment­al “Las Tortolas” power-generating island is being run by the giant Anglo American mining company at its Los Bronces mine, and the initiative comes as the government pushes to put Chile at the forefront of renewable energy use in Latin America and the world.

The 1,200-square-foot array of solar panels was inaugurate­d Thursday by Chilean Mining Minister Baldo Prokurica.

Officials said that if the test is successful, the US$250,000 plant could be expanded to cover 40 hectares, or nearly 100 acres.

The array floats in the middle of a pond that is used to contain the refuse from mining, known as tailings, and it is expected that its shadow will lower the water temperatur­e and reduce evaporatio­n by 80 per cent.

Thus, the mine would retain more of that water for its operations and could reduce the amount of fresh water it pumps in the dry mountainou­s region where water is a scarce commodity.

“With this system, we can make our fresh water consumptio­n more efficient, in line with our goal of re-imagining mining and reducing Anglo American’s fresh water consumptio­n by 50 per cent by 2030, as well as the CO2 emissions by producing non-polluting energy,” said Patricio Chacana, Los Bronces’s vice-president of operations.

If the yearlong experiment works as planned, the solar panel island could be expanded and new ones could be installed at other mining ponds. Experts say there are approximat­ely 800 such ponds in Chile.

“It is an excellent idea for the traceabili­ty of the mining industry and especially in terms of more efficient use of water. This is a company that recycles 76 per cent of the water it uses in its processes,” the mining minister said at the unveiling and he encouraged other mining companies to follow suit.

In addition, Prokurica said the Mining Ministry is working on a plan to improve the safety of the mine holding ponds, to guard against failures such as one at an iron ore mine recently in Brazil that unleashed a wall of mud that killed at least 186 people and polluted hundreds of miles of river. Many of the tailing ponds in the north of the country are near urban centres.

Los Bronces is about 3,500 metres above sea level and is 65 kilometres from the country’s capital, Santiago. In 2018, the mine produced 370,000 tonnes of fine copper and 2,421 tonnes of molybdenum.

 ?? MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A worker walks on solar panels installed on a floating platform run by the mining giant Anglo American. The experiment­al “Las Tortolas” island floats in the middle of a pond that is used to contain mining refuse, and is expected to help reduce evaporatio­n by 80 per cent.
MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A worker walks on solar panels installed on a floating platform run by the mining giant Anglo American. The experiment­al “Las Tortolas” island floats in the middle of a pond that is used to contain mining refuse, and is expected to help reduce evaporatio­n by 80 per cent.

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