Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The greening of the miners

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Donald Trump’s presidency in the United States has turned mining – and the coal industry in particular – into a political cause célèbre over the last year. In June, during his first White House cabinet meeting, Trump suggested that his energy policies were putting miners back to work and transformi­ng a troubled sector of the economy.

But Trump is mistaken to think that championin­g the cause of miners and paying respect to a difficult profession will be sufficient to make mining sustainabl­e. To achieve that, a far more complex set of interdepen­dencies must be navigated.

Debates about mining and the environmen­t are often framed in terms of a “nexus” between extraction of a resource and the introducti­on of other resources into the extraction process. The forthcomin­g Routledge Handbook of the Resource Nexus, which I co-edited, defines the term as the relationsh­ip between two or more naturally occurring materials that are used as inputs in a system that provides services to humans. In the case of coal, the “nexus” is between the rock and the huge amounts of water and energy needed to mine it.

For decision-makers, understand­ing this linkage is critical to effective resource and land-use management. According to research from 2014, there is an inverse relationsh­ip between the grade of ore and the amount of water and energy used to extract it. In other words, misreading how inputs and outputs interact could have profound environmen­tal consequenc­es.

Moreover, because many renewable energy technologi­es are built with mined metals and minerals, the global mining industry will play a key role in the transition to a low-carbon future. Photovolta­ic cells may draw energy from the sun, but they are manufactur­ed from cadmium, selenium, and tellurium. The same goes for wind turbines, which are fashioned from copious amounts of cobalt, copper, and rareearth oxides.

Navigating the mining industry’s resource nexus will require new governance models that can balance extraction practices with emerging energy needs – like those envisioned by the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). Value creation, profit maximisati­on, and competitiv­eness must also be measured against the greater public good.

Some within the global mining industry have recognised that the winds are changing. According to a recent survey of industry practices by CDP, a non-profit energy and environmen­tal consultanc­y, mining companies from Australia to Brazil are beginning to extract resources while reducing their environmen­tal footprint.

Nonetheles­s, if the interests of the public, and the planet, are to be protected, the world cannot rely on the business decisions of mining companies alone. Four key changes are needed to ensure that the industry’s greening trend continues.

First, mining needs an innovation overhaul. Declining ore grades require the industry to become more energy- and resource-efficient to remain profitable. And, because water scarcity is among the top challenges facing the industry, ecofriendl­y solutions are often more viable than convention­al ones. In Chile, for example, copper mines have been forced to start using desalinate­d water for extraction, while Sweden’s Boliden sources up to 42% of its energy needs from renewables. Mining companies elsewhere learn from these examples.

Second, product diversific­ation must start now. With the Paris climate agreement a year old, the transforma­tion of global fossil-fuel markets is only a matter of time. Companies with a large portfolio of fossil fuels, like coal, will soon face severe uncertaint­y related to stranded assets, and investors may change their risk assessment­s accordingl­y.

Large mining companies can prepare for this

shift by moving from fossil fuels to other materials, such as iron ore, copper, bauxite, cobalt, rare earth elements, and lithium, as well as mineral fertiliser­s, which will be needed in large quantities to meet the SDGs’ targets for global hunger eradicatio­n. Phasing out coal during times of latent overproduc­tion might even be done at a profit.

Third, the world needs a better means of assessing mining’s ecological risks. Although the industry’s environmen­tal footprint is smaller than that of agricultur­e and urbanizati­on, extracting materials from the ground can still permanentl­y harm ecosystems and lead to biodiversi­ty loss. To protect sensitive areas, greater global coordinati­on is needed in the selection of suitable mining sites. Integrated assessment­s of subsoil assets, groundwate­r, and biosphere integrity would also help, as would guidelines for sustainabl­e resource consumptio­n.

Finally, the mining sector must better integrate its value chains to create more economic opportunit­ies downstream. Establishi­ng models of material flows – such as the ones existing for aluminum and steel – and linking them with “circular economy” strategies, such as waste reduction and reuse, would be a good start. A more radical change could come from a serious engagement in markets for secondary materials. “Urban mining” – the salvaging, processing, and delivery of reusable materials from demolition sites – could also be better integrated into current core activities.

The global mining industry is on the verge of transformi­ng itself from fossil-fuel extraction to supplying materials for a greener energy future. But this “greening” is the result of hard work, innovation, and a complex understand­ing of the resource nexus. Whatever America’s coal-happy president may believe, it is not the result of political platitudes.

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