Otago Daily Times

Rio Tinto silent on toxic waste

The Tiwai Point aluminium smelter has stockpiled more than 100,000 tonnes of cyanidelac­ed hazardous waste less than 100m from a fasterodin­g Southland beach. Phil Pennington reports.

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THE Tiwai Point smelter company will not reveal its plans for hazardous waste, despite internatio­nal industry guidelines it has signed up to that say it should.

The Government said earlier this month it remained ‘‘completely blind’’ as to what contaminat­ion the closure of the smelter at Tiwai Point might leave behind.

Spent cell liner waste contains hazardous chemical compounds including fluoride and cyanide, and produces explosive gases when mixed with water. It is sometimes called SCL, Spent Pot Lining, or SPL.

The Rio Tintocontr­olled smelter said in 2010 that it had stockpiled 186,000 tonnes of the waste; it has not said how much it has now, but since then it is estimated it would have produced about another 80,000 tonnes, or a quarter of a million tonnes all up. It has held export permits for 78,000 tonnes of that.

By comparison, the smelter drossouvea premix causing such a problem at Mataura totals just 8000 tonnes.

SCL is the ‘‘most significan­t solid waste’’ to come from smelting, according to the aluminium industry's global body, the Internatio­nal Aluminium Institute.

It is such an environmen­tal headache worldwide that the institute last year put out 70 pages of guidelines and case studies on what to do with it.

The guidelines — which Rio Tinto helped produce — say companies should make their plans for SCL public.

But New Zealand Aluminium Smelters did not respond to

RNZ's request for its plans and risk assessment of SCL at Tiwai Point, other than to say ‘‘we don't share operationa­l details with the media’’ or the public.

After repeated approaches by RNZ, the company added:

‘‘We are satisfied that the SCL is stored safely and that there are appropriat­e systems in place to enable NZAS to monitor the performanc­e of the storage facility.’’

An Australian government study into dealing with its nationwide stockpile of about 700,000 tonnes, in 2016 warned:

‘‘The toxic, corrosive, and reactive nature of SPL means that particular care must be taken in its handling, transporta­tion and storage.’’

It noted a fatal explosion from mishandlin­g the waste in Canada in 1990. The waste reacts with water to give off toxic and explosive hydrogen, methane, and ammonia.

At Tiwai Point, 106,000 tonnes are stockpiled on an engineered concrete pad the size of about two football fields, with purposebui­lt drainage and capture, a kilometre east of the main plant opposite Bluff.

The company revealed this figure late on Friday.

The pad is just 85m from the southfacin­g beach next to Foveaux Strait. It is next to Department of Conservati­on land and near the internatio­nally recognised Awarua wetlands.

The smelter company's own documents show erosion of the beach has doubled since 2017 to fourtofive metres per year.

It reported to the Department of Conservati­on that it ‘‘needed to know if the fast encroachin­g shore line was likely to threaten NZAS's groundwate­r monitoring bores or infrastruc­ture by the Cathode Treatment Plant’’.

The plant treats runoff from the SCL stockpile before it goes into the sea under consents from the regional council, and the smelter monitors groundwate­r in the area.

‘‘We continuous­ly monitor the condition of the shoreline and report to Environmen­t Southland annually,’’ the company told RNZ.

The storage pad shows up in online maps as a big white rectangle.

A decade ago, the smelter was aiming to rid itself of the SCL stockpile by 2030.

Lack of clarity over plans for SCL stockpile

More than half of the

1.6 million tonnes of SCL generated worldwide each year is stored indefinite­ly or landfilled. But burying it in a landfill is ‘‘the least preferable’’ approach, and all the cleanest options are expensive, such as processing it to use in cement production, the internatio­nal guidelines show.

These state that companies should have longterm management plans and risk assessment­s for the waste, and be entirely upfront with the public about them:

‘‘Transparen­cy on company policies, procedures and processes’’ and decisionma­king, and ‘‘public disclosure of SPL management plans, activities and performanc­e’’ were required.

However, New Zealand Aluminium Smelters' current management plan, risk assessment and its plan to deal with the waste by the new closure date for the plant of December 2024, remain under wraps.

Without mentioning SCL, the company said in response to RNZ's questions about the waste, that it was conducting an ‘‘extensive’’ study of how to close Tiwai Point ‘‘in a responsibl­e manner’’, with input from independen­t scientists.

The plan's first stage was due out ‘‘late this year’’, and it would make details of that public in due course.

Environmen­t Southland, which regulates discharge consents, said it was aware of the SCL stockpile, but could not comment on any plans for it.

The Invercargi­ll City Council, which regulates waste storage, said it had just now decided to reverse its decadesold practice of not monitoring any operations by any industry that are permitted under its District Plan. This includes the stockpilin­g and disposal of waste at the smelter.

The veil over the smelter's plans compounds a general lack of visibility, and Environmen­t Minister David Parker admitted this month he was ‘‘completely blind’’ about the residual contaminat­ion that will confront the country at Tiwai Point.

The Government has been focused on the Mataura dross problem, which has received media attention, and is playing catchup at the smelter itself.

The Environmen­t Ministry told RNZ it had been engaging with the smelter beginning five months ago, ‘‘over how it will address its waste situation’’.

The Gore District mayor has said it is critical to find out about this or Southlande­rs might face a big cleanup bill — but he added he doubted even Rio Tinto knows the environmen­tal situation.

Taxpayers are now funding a $300,000 regional council study, and the council aims to increase monitoring and groundwate­r sampling.

The Australian Government produced its own study into clearing SCL stockpiles five years ago, aiming to cut those back over the following decade.

It noted financial costs of managing the waste were ‘‘significan­t’’, at least $1000 a tonne, and ongoing in landfills.

The United States classified SCL as a hazardous waste in 1998.

A US Environmen­tal Protection Agency ruling prohibited disposal of untreated SCL, and stressed the need to destroy the cyanide in it, saying this was is the most ‘‘dangerous constituen­t of SPL, based on its concentrat­ion, toxicity, and the extent of contaminat­ion caused by past land disposal of untreated spent potliners’’.

At Tiwai Point, the smelter company now faces legal action over the SCL waste. Retired environmen­tal engineer Carl Reller, from Wairarapa, is seeking an enforcemen­t order from the Environmen­t Court to force a cleanup.

At Mataura, it took legal action by the small lobby group, the Environmen­tal Defence Society, to achieve a recent deal with Rio Tinto to remove the bags of dross — and taxpayers will pay half the $1 million cost.

Regulation­s ‘so old'

The SCL waste comes from inside the cells used to make aluminium, when the lining breaks down after a few years.

It has been piling up for 50 years since Tiwai opened. Planning approval of the smelter in the late 1960s did not provide for its eventual closure, Invercargi­ll City Council documents show.

The city council's 2019 district plan says that preservati­on of the coastal environmen­t beside the smelter ‘‘is a matter of national importance’’.

It adds that the plant's environmen­tal effects ‘‘are continuous­ly monitored and independen­tly reviewed’’, though not by the council.

The internatio­nal aluminium industry guidelines require that the suitabilit­y of sites for handling SCL be assessed. They discuss, for instance, storing it in buildings protected from water surges.

A 1995 study at Tiwai looked at pumping up groundwate­r that had SCL leachate in it, and treating it, but concluded that letting nature take its course was preferable, as the cyanide was being converted into a very low toxicity and very stable form in the groundwate­r.

Stormwater and leachate from the Tiwai stockpile is put through a treatment plant before going into the ocean.

New Zealand Aluminium Smelters (NZAS) said in a statement to RNZ it took its operating responsibi­lities ‘‘very seriously and in accordance with all relevant legal and regulatory requiremen­ts’’.

In mid2020, it said it would shut the smelter by August this year.

The Government stepped in, as it has several times, to stave this off, until late 2024.

The smelter, which meets internatio­nal certified standards for responsibl­e production, employs 1000 people and estimates it generates $600 million a year for the national economy.

How much liner waste is left?

RNZ has asked how much SCL waste is left at Tiwai Point but the company has not said.

The company began an export project in 2010, getting its first permit in 2014; it currently has two permits to export 16,000 tonnes a year to Europe, although these permits expire next month.

Some of the Tiwai waste has been processed overseas into mineral wool insulation, or detoxified for use in cement, bricks and the like in Europe, according to the Aluminium Institute, though it gives no figures.

In addition, a cement plant at Westport took a fraction of the waste for a couple of years before it shut down about 2014.

But the waste barely rates a mention in the company's public environmen­tal reports for the last decade, which NZAS referred RNZ to.

Environmen­t Southland compliance manager Simon Mapp said in a statement that the concrete pad was ‘‘an historical storage site and we are informed that more recently, spent cell liner waste has been sent off site for appropriat­e disposal or for use by other industries’’.

The regional and city councils had agreed to work closely, and work with the smelter on its closure plan, city council chief executive Clare Hadley said.

As to its Uturn over monitoring, the council said this was not targeted at the smelter, but a general direction from management to improve practices.

‘‘When one reflects on other events, e.g. the recent fire in stockpiled tyres [in North Canterbury], it is clear that we are all becoming much more aware of the impact of historic activities on environmen­tal wellbeing,’’ Ms Hadley said.

The Environmen­tal Protection Authority (EPA) issues permits for hazardous waste export, but said any questions around environmen­tal compliance belonged with the councils.

Rio Tinto recently suffered internatio­nal opprobrium and underwent a cleanout of some of its top global executives after an inquiry found it knowingly blew up ancient aboriginal caves in West Australia last year.

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 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? The smelter at Tiwai Point.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED The smelter at Tiwai Point.
 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? A photo from an ‘‘Annual Doc Compliance Report’' by NZAS. At the top of the photo is the cathode treatment plant, and the edge of the SCL stockpile.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED A photo from an ‘‘Annual Doc Compliance Report’' by NZAS. At the top of the photo is the cathode treatment plant, and the edge of the SCL stockpile.

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