Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

EPA considers use of robots to clean polluted mines

Agency doesn’t want rerun of 2015 Colorado disaster

- By Dan Elliott

DENVER — Crumbling mine tunnels awash with polluted waters perforate the Colorado mountains, and scientists may one day send robots creeping through the pitchblack passages to study the mysterious currents that sometimes burst to the surface with devastatin­g effects.

One such disaster happened at the inactive Gold King Mine in southweste­rn Colorado in 2015, when the Environmen­tal Protection Agency accidental­ly triggered the release of 3 million gallons of mustard-colored water laden with arsenic, lead and other contaminan­ts. The spill tainted rivers in three states.

Now, the EPA is considerin­g using robots and other sophistica­ted technology to help prevent these types of “blowouts” or clean them up if they happen. But first the agency has to find out what’s inside the mines, some of which date to Colorado’s gold rush in the 1860s.

Wastewater containing toxic heavy metals has been spewing from hundreds of inactive mines nationwide for decades, the product of complicate­d and sometimes poorly understood subterrane­an flows.

Mining creates tainted water in steps: Blasting out tunnels and processing ore exposes long-buried, sulfur-bearing rocks to oxygen. The sulfur and oxygen mix with natural undergroun­d water flows to create sulfuric acid. The acidic water then leaches heavy metals out of the rocks.

To manage and treat the wastewater, the EPA needs a clear idea of what’s inside the mines, some of which penetrate thousands of feet into the mountains. But many old mines are poorly documented.

Investigat­ing with robots would be cheaper, faster and safer than humans.

“You can send a robot into an area that doesn’t have good air quality. You can send a robot into an area that doesn’t have much space,” said Rebecca Thomas, project manager for the EPA’s newly created Gold King Superfund site.

Instrument­s on the robots could map the mines and analyze pollutants in the water.

They would look more like golf carts than the personable robots from “Star Wars” movies. Hao Zhang, an assistant professor of computer science at the Colorado School of Mines, envisions a battery-powered robot about 5 feet long with wheels or tracks to get through collapsing, rubble-strewn tunnels.

Zhang and a team of students demonstrat­ed a smaller robot in a mine west of Denver recently. It purred smoothly along flat tunnel floors but toppled over trying to negotiate a cluttered passage.

“The terrain is pretty rough,” Zhang said. “It’s hard for even humans to navigate in that environmen­t.”

A commercial robot modified to explore abandoned mines — including those swamped with acidic wastewater — could cost about $90,000 and take three to four years to develop, Zhang said.

 ?? Tatiana Flowers The Associated Press ?? The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is considerin­g robots and other technologi­es to investigat­e abandoned or inactive mines.
Tatiana Flowers The Associated Press The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is considerin­g robots and other technologi­es to investigat­e abandoned or inactive mines.

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