Tag Archives: Brazil

US DFC investment paves way for Piauí nickel-cobalt production, TechMet says

The US International Development Finance Corp (DFC) has made a $25 million investment into TechMet Ltd, a private investment company with a portfolio of projects that produce, process and recycle metals tied to the production of electric vehicles (EVs), renewable energy systems and energy storage.

The funds will be used to bring into initial commercial production one of TechMet’s core investments, Brazilian Nickel Plc, which will be a low-cost nickel-cobalt producer in Piaui, in north-eastern Brazil, it said.

Piauí is a nickel laterite heap leaching project that has a combined measured and indicated JORC compliant resource of 72 Mt at 1% Ni and 0.05% Co. Brazilian Nickel has previously completed a large-scale demonstration of the heap leaching, purification and recovery of nickel and cobalt from the Piauí ore (pictured).

The DFC investment, part of TechMet’s Round 2 equity raising, follows on the heels of US President, Donald Trump, signing an Executive Order and declaring a National Emergency to expand the domestic mining industry, support mining jobs, alleviate unnecessary permitting delays, and reduce the US’ dependence on China for critical minerals.

Nickel and cobalt are two key ingredients in the production of lithium-ion batteries that power EVs and provide renewable energy storage. As battery technologies transform the global mobility and energy landscape, the demand growth for these metals is expected to accelerate.

TechMet said: “While China has built a position of overwhelming supply chain dominance, the United States’ continued reliance on imports for the supply of critical metals represents a significant threat to the long-term competitiveness of American industry. TechMet, aligned with US interests, is committed to developing an independent supply of these critical metals.”

Brian Menell, Chairman and CEO of TechMet, said: “We are very pleased to have secured this funding and support from DFC, which enables Brazilian Nickel Plc to begin the commercial production of nickel and cobalt products used in the production of EV batteries. Having this level of US support is a great endorsement of TechMet’s team and strategy.”

Adam Boehler, CEO of the US International Development Finance Corp, a US Government agency, said: “This important financing will support economic growth in one of Brazil’s most underdeveloped areas. Investments in critical materials for advanced technology support development and advance US foreign policy.”

TechMet has been operational for three years and its core investments include:

  • Brazilian Nickel Plc;
  • Li-Cycle – lithium-ion battery recycling with a producing plant in Canada and a plant under construction in Rochester, New York;
  • US Vanadium – vanadium specialty chemicals production in Arkansas (USA); and
  • Tinco – one of the largest tin and tungsten mines in Rwanda.

TechMet also has an interest in a producing Rare Earths metals project and is developing TechMet Ventures to invest in new opportunities across the supply chain, it says.

Appian, Atlantic Nickel reinvigorate Santa Rita as nickel sulphide fortunes rise

At the height of the most recent nickel boom – when prices were over $20,000/t on the LME – the Santa Rita mine looked like a great option to gain exposure to the stainless steel raw material.

Mirabela Nickel, the mine owner, represented a pure-play nickel stock; Brazil, as a jurisdiction, was looked at favourably by investors; and the operation, itself, was one of the largest open-pit nickel sulphide mines in the world slated to produce 16,500 t/y of nickel sulphide in concentrate.

Gaining exposure to such a large, low grade asset is great when the underlying commodity price is tracking well, but, as has been shown time and again, it proves problematic when the price moves south.

Such a price deterioration came to pass in the years following the mine’s start up in 2009.

The asset, in north-eastern Brazil, was eventually placed on care and maintenance in the March quarter of 2016 as Mirabela Nickel declared bankruptcy. This was the same year the nickel price dipped below $10,000/t.

Fortunately for the local community and personnel that had invested much hope in the development of the $1 billion-plus mine, Appian Capital Advisory more recently took the view that there was a way forward for Santa Rita.

Picking up on an emerging trend for clean and green nickel sulphide concentrate from the electric vehicle and stationary storage market, plus the ability to re-engineer the operation and make it a much more robust asset, the company carried out a six-month due diligence process on Santa Rita.

This process led Appian to refine its understanding of the presence of nickel sulphides within the deposit, as opposed to the asset’s total contained nickel. With this understanding in hand, a more defensive and low-cost mine plan was developed to see the asset through nickel price peaks and troughs.

Appian ended up acquiring Santa Rita and setting up the Atlantic Nickel operating entity to enact these changes.

Having restarted open-pit mining just over a year ago, the asset is starting to pay back the faith Appian has placed in this plan.

“Our resource now focuses on the estimation of nickel sulphide within the deposit and benefits from additional drilling we’ve undertaken post-acquisition,” Adam Fisher, Principal, Appian Capital Advisory LLP, explained to IM. “The mine design we’ve developed extracts the deposit more selectively and also moves less waste, resulting in the low cost performance we’ve been able to achieve to date.”

In the first half of 2020, the company declared first quartile C1 cost performance of $3.17/lb ($6,989/t) nickel, net of by-products. This compares favourably with Mirabela Nickel’s $6.19/lb operating cost recorded in the September quarter of 2013.

“Among the operating changes we’ve implemented are the use of a smaller, locally procured, equipment fleet of 40 t trucks (Santa Rita previously used Caterpillar 777 90 t and 785 137 t payload trucks), the use of shorter benches – we’ve gone from 10 m down to, on average, 6 m – and tighter blasting patterns,” Fisher said.

All this work is being carried out by a Brazil-based consortium of contract miners.

“With smaller benches, tighter blasting patterns and smaller equipment fleets, we have more consistent control on the grade and fragmentation of the material that is fed to the crusher,” Fisher said.

The focus has gone beyond the near term, with more than 100,000 m of drilling executed in the underground resource area. The drilling was optimised for resource growth and classification confidence. The program was extremely successful and supported the declaration of the underground resource of 168 Mt at 0.59% NiS and 0.19% Cu. The 2020 drill programs continue to intersect similar widths and grades while stepping out from the declared resource, the company added.

The NI 43-101 technical report, released earlier this month, outlined a 34-year mine life for Santa Rita, with eight years of open-pit production, underpinned by proven and probable reserves of 50.6 Mt at 0.31% NiS, followed by 26 years of underground mining.

While still preliminary, this represented a very different approach to the previous Santa Rita owner.

“The last owners designed an open-pit mine with a 6:1 strip ratio and were planning to mine a lot deeper into the resource via open-pit methods,” Fisher said. “This was back in a very different nickel market when prices were greater than $10/Ib.

“All we did was find the optimal transition to bulk methods at depth to understand that it only makes sense to mine this as an open pit over eight years at a strip ratio that comes down to, on average, 2.7:1.”

Backing up this open-pit mine plan has been a 6.5 Mt/y plant, which, having started production in 2009, was completely refurbished and recommissioned in the second half of 2019 to align with the nickel sulphide recovery focus.

The plant consists of crushing, grinding, flotation, thickening and filtration unit operations to produce a saleable nickel sulphide concentrate. Flotation tailings are pumped to a tailings storage facility, while grinding is performed by a SAG mill, two ball mills and two pebble crushers. This is followed by a conditioning circuit and a flotation circuit, with the final concentrate thickened and pumped to storage tanks ready for filtration. Concentrate is filtered in a Larox (Metso Outotec) pressure filter. Following filtration, the final concentrate is trucked to the port of Ilhéus where it is loaded onto ships for transport to market.

Since the restart, more than five shipments have been made to the mine’s offtake partners.

“While the mine and plant are still ramping up, the open-pit operation is not far off from achieving the PEA estimates of being able to produce 20,000-25,000 t/y of contained nickel sulphide equivalent at a C1 cost of $2.97/Ib nickel,” Fisher said.

Beyond this, the company is looking to leverage innovation to create one of the largest and most efficient sub-level cave (SLC) operations in the world able to produce more of the highly sought after nickel sulphide product Santa Rita is becoming known for.

Caving in

“When carrying out the due diligence on Santa Rita, we knew all along that there was some good, thick intersections underground, with the orebody getting thicker at depth and the nickel sulphide grade improving,” Marcus Scholz, Head of Underground Mining at Appian Capital Advisory, told IM.

This was evident in the PEA, with underground mining inventory of 134.1 Mt grading 0.54% NiS and 0.17% Cu, comparing favourably – in terms of grade – with the proven and probable reserves of 50.6 Mt at 0.31% NiS and 0.11% Cu calculated for the eight-year open-pit operation.

“You’re looking at a massive orebody with moderate grades,” Scholz said. “Factoring that in, the lowest cost methods will generate the better margins in this case. With SLC having come a long way in the last 20 years in terms of practices, philosophies and the ability to control dilution through effective planning and modelling, plus the suitable geometry of the Santa Rita orebody, it was a good fit.”

This low-cost caving method allows the company to exploit more of the resource than other methods such as long-hole open stoping with backfill, plus fill the existing plant, Scholz explained.

Scholz was keen to point out that the company did not come to this conclusion on its own. It sought assistance from Power Geotechnical out of Australia, which has worked on other sub-level cave operations such as Carrapateena and Ernest Henry, when assessing its options.

Ernest Henry, operated by Glencore in Queensland, Australia, is a good analogue here. The Ernest Henry orebody is located at a similar depth below a pit and has a similar width and dip, but Santa Rita is about twice the size due to it being longer along strike, according to Scholz. It also comes with a similar 6 Mt/y profile.

Photography of Glencore’s Ernest Henry Mine near Cloncurry in Western Queensland

The SLC mining layout in the PEA comprises 37 mining levels spaced at vertical intervals of 25 m. Each level is made up of parallel and evenly spaced drill drives from which production drilling and blasting occur. Once blasted, the mineralisation is loaded from the drill drives using LHDs and loaded into trucks for haulage to the surface during the initial ramp-up phase, and later to ore passes feeding an underground crushing station and conveying to surface via an inclined tunnel.

The PEA plans will have the company mine directly beneath the open pit to start with, hence the reason it expects to start up production in 2028 after open-pit mining has concluded.

The underground operation will start with two years of waste development ahead of ore production, followed by ore truck haulage over a three-year period, Scholz outlined. After this, the operation will transition to underground conveyor haulage, ramping up to 6 Mt/y capacity over the next four years.

Asked why the company was starting with truck haulage before moving to conveyors, Scholz said it was an economic decision.

“If we truck first, we can delay some of the underground spend in terms of getting the underground crusher in,” he said.

Over the life of the underground mine, the company plans to install two underground crushers, being fed with roughly equal amounts of ore. The first will serve the upper half of the deposit and the second crusher the lower half (circa-6 Mt/y each, staged as mining progresses deeper in the deposit).

The first crusher will be positioned about 650 m below surface, or 450 m below the ultimate depth of the open pit.

“This will take a bit of time to get down there and access it (in terms of mine development), so it makes sense to start haulage with trucks,” Scholz said.

Appian is looking to lease the 60 t trucks required for this stage of the operation, explaining that Atlantic Nickel will operate the 12 machines needed at the height of truck haulage, which is when mining rates hit the annualised 2.5 Mt/y mark.

The truck haulage route will be a short one, travelling some 200-300 m below surface to access material before going back above ground.

After the conveyor transition, the trucks are expected to be used in later years for waste haulage, which could amount to some 500,000 t/y of material, according to Scholz.

Automation and electrification transition

It is when the conveyor starts up that the automation element of Santa Rita Underground really kicks into gear.

The company assumed the use of automated LHDs, longhole drilling and jumbo development drilling in the PEA. This saw Epiroc, Caterpillar and Sandvik provide price inputs, with design layouts anticipating such equipment.

Scholz expanded on this for IM: “We foresee that loaders going from the SLC drawpoints to the ore passes would be automated, meanwhile, at the collection level at the bottom of ore passes, we would probably have up to three large automated loaders that transfer material to the crusher.”

Longhole drills would also be automated for the SLC, while the company plans to automate face drilling activities on the development jumbos it will use.

“I think in another eight years’ time when we start up production, a lot of this technology is going to be the norm in the industry,” Scholz said.

The current study assumes the use of a diesel-powered load and haul (initially) fleet, though electric vehicles could provide upside in future studies and further reduce energy costs, equipment maintenance costs and ventilation power costs, an Appian spokesperson recently told IM.

“Both tethered- and battery-powered machines will be looked at for specific applications within the mine, such as loading from drawpoints and feeding the underground crusher from the bottom of ore passes,” the spokesperson explained.

While much of the industry’s larger load and haul equipment has not yet made the commercial leap to battery power, the company is keen to pursue developments in the future as the technology became available, Scholz said.

The circularity of such a move will not be lost on Appian or Atlantic Nickel, knowing the nickel sulphide concentrate it will be offloading could end up in these battery-powered machines. In eight years, these end users will most likely be factoring such emissions-reducing technology into their raw material procurement choices.

For the time being, the company is focused on completing the underground drilling program at Santa Rita, which has, to date, shown much promise.

Fisher said every hole has intersected nickel sulphides to this point meaning the chances of a further underground resource upgrade in the early part of next year were high.

These figures will be factored into a prefeasibility study later in 2021, which will include more detailed geotechnical information on the SLC, as well as subsidence modelling, Scholz said.

Vale looks for increased operational flexibility with S11D iron ore expansion plan

Vale is to increase the capacity of its S11D iron ore operation, in Canaã dos Carajás, Brazil, after its Board of Directors approved the implementation of the Serra Sul 120 project.

The $1.5 billion Serra Sul 120 project will see the S11D mine-plant capacity increase by 20 Mt/y to 120 Mt/y. Start-up is expected in the first half of 2024, Vale says.

The project includes the opening of new mining areas, the duplication of the long-distance conveyor, the implementation of new processing lines at the plant and the expansion of storage areas, among other measures.

“The Serra Sul 120 project will create an important buffer of productive capacity, ensuring greater operational flexibility to face eventual production or licensing restrictions in the Northern System,” Vale said.

The $385 million investment to duplicate the existing long-distance conveyor, in addition to providing flexibility, also aggregates important elements for the reduction of operational risks, adding reliability to the system, according to the company. The existing long distance conveyor is part of a major in-pit crushing and conveying system at the mine. It could see Vale’s Northern System capacity rise by 20 Mt/y to 260 Mt/y.

“The expansion of the mine-plant capacity and the development of additional logistics capacity are important steps for the iron ore volume growth, the maximisation of margin and the flight-to-quality optimisation,” the company said.

With the anticipated investment for Serra Sul 120 and the delay in the execution of projects in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Vale says it will, in due course, revise and update its investment guidance for 2021, currently at $5 billion, and in the period between 2022-2024, with an average of $4.5 billion.

Metso lines up LatAm tailings tests after setting up full-scale VPX filter in Brazil

Metso says it has started full-scale testing of its VPX™ filter for tailings dewatering in Brazil, with eight tailings tests lined up with companies that process iron ore, copper and gold.

In 2019, Metso launched Tailings Management Solutions (TMS), its response to the global challenge of managing mining tailings efficiently. The company sees the dewatering of waste as the future of mining, allowing the removal of water and its reuse in the plant, itself, or as part of restoration projects. Its VPX filter is part of this TMS platform.

With an operating pressure of up to 25 bar, the VPX can deal with difficult-to-dewater tailings and enable up to 90% water recovery, according to the company.

Metso says a full-scale VPX filter is now in place at its facilities in Sorocaba, Brazil, where the first tests from samples sent by several mining companies from Brazil and Latin America started in March.

“This is not a laboratory test, but filtration in industrial-scale conditions using VPX technology, which has the capacity to process high volumes of ores,” Rodrigo Gouveia, Metso’s Vice President, Tailings Management Systems, said. “Tailings dewatering is technically and economically a viable option for today and the future. Dry stacking is widely acknowledged to be the safest, most sustainable option for tailings storage. We see that there is a strong demand for short- and medium-term technical solutions.”

Fausto Rezende, Metso’s Mining Equipment Sales Director in charge of TMS in Brazil, said there is another potential application in the adoption of tailings management: legacy dams. “We can develop projects for the dredging and concentration of the tailings and, in many cases, it is possible that this operation is more economically viable than virgin ore,” he said.

Metso already has expertise in dewatering solutions and, depending on each mining application and customer needs, carries out engineering to determine the specifications for the most suitable dewatering technology. It can pick from lamella thickeners, hydrocyclones and filters to tailings stackers, through pumping solutions and conveyor belts.

Boston Metal to trial molten oxide electrolysis on CBMM ore

CBMM, a leading supplier of niobium products and technology, and Boston Metal have signed a strategic partnership to trial Boston Metal’s molten oxide electrolysis (MOE) technology for the production of niobium products.

Together, the companies will deploy the MOE technology at CBMM’s production plant in Araxá, Brazil, with first commissioning expected later this year.

CBMM, as of 2016, produced 90,000 t/y of ferroniobium equivalent, with plans to increase this further. Its mine in Araxá contains pyrochlore, a mineral that hosts niobium, among other constituents, which CBMM turns into niobium-based products.

Boston Metal said: “With this partnership, CBMM and Boston Metal will seek to further advance niobium production efficiency and provide innovative material transformation solutions. CBMM’s leadership in the niobium market is a direct result of decades of research and development investment in niobium processing and its focus on collaborating with customers and partners across the globe to develop better materials.”

Boston Metal, based in Woburn, Massachusetts, has developed the patented MOE technology as a platform for the production of a wide variety of alloys. The MOE technology uses electricity to reduce metals from their oxide form, such as CBMM’s niobium oxide containing raw materials, into high-quality, molten metal products.

At its Massachusetts headquarters, Boston Metal is developing MOE for the production of metals and alloys, and, with this partnership, MOE hardware and Boston Metal personnel will be deployed at CBMM’s headquarters in Araxá, enabling the teams to collaborate closely, Boston Metal said.

Tadeu Carneiro, Chairman and CEO of Boston Metal, said: “The MOE technology that is being developed by the team at Boston Metal promises a new era in metallurgy and, in CBMM, we found a partner that shares our fundamental commitment to technology leadership.”

Vale evaluating wet tailings processing alternatives at Brucutu iron ore mine

Vale says it is evaluating short-term alternatives to the wet processing of tailings at its Brucutu iron ore mine, in Brazil, as it looks to step up processing activities at the Minas Gerais operation.

The Brucutu plant, which used to dispose of tailings in the Norte/Laranjeiras dam – that has been at “emergency level 1” since December 2, 2019 – is continuing to operate at around 40% of its capacity through wet processing and tailings filtration, Vale noted.

Yet, the miner said it was evaluating “short-term alternatives” for tailings disposal, such as the optimised use of the Sul dam. These options are being tested by geotechnical and operational teams and may increase Brucutu plant’s processing capacity to 80%, Vale noted.

It warned that, if such alternatives for tailings disposal or the reclassification of the emergency level for Norte/Laranjeiras dam are not achieved until the end of the June quarter, there will “likely be an impact on the 2020 annual iron ore fines production volume”.

Vale took the decision to temporarily suspend the disposal of tailings at the Laranjeiras dam, part of the Brucutu iron ore mine, while assessing the dam’s geotechnical characteristics, back in December. During the shutdown, the dam will have the Level 1 emergency protocol adopted, Vale said. At that point, Vale put the suspension period at one-to-two months.

At the same time, the company reiterated its plans to continue to invest in dry stacking technologies to reduce its exposure to wet tailings dams.

BHP and Vale invest in COVID-19 testing and mitigation measures in Chile, Brazil

BHP and Vale have invested in measures to help mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 virus in Chile and Brazil, respectively.

While BHP has already announced COVID-19-related plans to hire more people and provide preventative measures in Australia, on top of freeing up money for to support local suppliers, it has now tabled its $8 million strategy in Chile aimed at strengthening the country’s public health network in the face of the pandemic.

It has joined with the Medical Faculty of Universidad Católica with the immediate objective of raising the testing capacity and strengthening the Familiar Health Centers of the South East Area of the Metropolitan Region, as well as Antofagasta and Tarapacá – where its majority-owned Escondida and Cerro Colorado copper operations, respectively, reside.

This plan includes:

  • An Early Detection Program through rapid testing, in support of the Primary Attention Centers (this includes 150,000 rapid tests for detecting the virus). This system includes 10 units for sampling, with mobile tents and permanent units, the company said;
  • Expansion of laboratory capacity, including the purchase of new analysis equipment to maximise the speed for processing tests. Results will be delivered to patients in 24 hours, BHP said;
  • Community surveillance for cases that test positive and their contacts, based at Primary Attention Centers and telemedicine; and
  • A 24/7 call centre for identifying potential cases.

Daniel Malchuk, President Operations at Minerals Americas, said: “This plan shows our commitment and our profound belief that we should work together to face the difficult times we are going through.”

In addition, BHP will implement a program to support communities and high-risk vulnerable groups in the regions where the company operates, Antofagasta and Tarapacá. This will allow the delivery of supplies, sanitisation of public areas, areas for the isolation of potential cases and support to the state network to increase medical rounds, supplies and treatment for high-risk people, it said.

BHP previously changed the terms of payment for all providers and collaborators in Chile, with large taxpayers cut to 30 days, small and medium enterprises reduced to 14 days and local companies from the Antofagasta and Tarapacá Regions having their terms cut to seven days.

Vale, meanwhile, said its China subsidiary had recently taken delivery of the first batch of 5 million rapid test kits to diagnose COVID-19.

The tests, which can provide results in just 15 minutes, were purchased from China and will be delivered to the Brazilian government, it said. Produced by the Chinese company Wondfo, the test is registered at the National Health Surveillance Agency (Anvisa, Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária) and was donated by Vale to help the Brazil Government fight the spread of the virus in the country.

Some 500,000 units are currently in transit (by plane) from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, in the Chinese province of Guangdong, on their way to the International Airport of Guarulhos (São Paulo). They are expected to arrive in Brazil this evening.

Vale’s CEO, Eduardo Bartolomeo, said: “Vale offers this support to the Brazilian society at this time when the country is united for the health and safety of people. We are using our logistics network from Asia to bring inputs that can make a difference in people’s lives in Brazil.”

The remaining 4.5 million units will be delivered by the supplier in April, Vale said.

The amount of test kits purchased by Vale represents half of the needs estimated by the Brazilian Ministry of Health as of March 22, it explained.

Cat 7495 electric rope shovel on its way to Kinross Gold’s Paracatu mine

A Cat 7495 electric rope shovel originally built in 2012 is on its way to Kinross Gold’s Paracatu gold mine in Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Paracatu, an open-pit mine with ore processed in ball and SAG mills, is Brazil’s largest gold mine, according to Kinross. It achieved record annual production of 619,563 gold-equivalent ounces in 2019, surpassing its 2018 record.

Kinross started an asset optimisation program in 2018, which completed in late 2019 with the successful implementation of a grade control program that led to better characterisation of the orebody, an improved ability to predict and react to ore variability, and better mill efficiency with improvements in throughput and recovery, it said.

Cat said the shovel’s ballast box and revolving frame left Green Valley, Arizona, USA, last week on two heavy haul trucks – one pulling and one pushing the 120 t load. At 61 m long and 5 m wide, the load is being escorted by a team responsible for removing and replacing power lines, traffic signals and signage along the way, it said.

Late last year, Cat updated the AC electric drive system for Cat 7495 and 7495 HF electric rope shovels to, it said, deliver even greater reliability, improved maintenance access, enhanced safety and an expanded ability to perform at high altitudes and in extreme temperatures.

Back in 2018, Kinross welcomed its second Cat 7495 electric rope shovel to its Round Mountain mine, in Nevada, as part of its Phase W expansion plan.

Anglo American renews clean energy commitment in Brazil

Atlas Renewable Energy, a leading renewable energy company in Latin America, and Anglo American have signed the largest solar energy purchase and sale contract in Brazil worth an estimated BRL881 million ($190 million).

The clean energy supply contract will see the Atlas Casablanca photovoltaic solar plant, in Minas Gerais, supply about 9 TWh over a 15-year period, commencing in 2022.

This contract is part of Anglo American’s strategy to use 100% renewable energy for its operations in Brazil as of 2022 and is part of Anglo American’s Sustainable Mining Plan, which has among its goals to reduce CO2 emissions by 30% by 2030.

In addition to the Minas-Rio iron ore operation, in Minas Gerais, Anglo also has the Barro Alto nickel operation (Goiás).

The Atlas Casablanca solar plant has an installed capacity of 330 MW with more than 800,000 modules, according to Atlas. This is enough energy to supply a city of 1.4 million inhabitants, according to the average consumption of a Brazilian family, it says.

“Atlas Renewable Energy will use bifacial modules in the Atlas Casablanca solar plant, a cutting-edge technology in the generation of solar energy,” the company said. “These novel solar panels are able to use the reflection of the sun’s rays from their front and back sides, increasing the efficiency of the photoelectric conversion, and therefore increasing the energy generation and efficiency of the plant.”

Wilfred Bruijn, CEO of Anglo American in Brazil, said: “With this agreement and the contract for the construction of a wind power plant in Bahia (an agreement with AES Tietê) signed in December, we will now be sourcing 90% of our energy from renewable sources, leading to a 40% reduction in CO2 emissions associated with our activities.”

Carlos Barrera, Atlas Renewable Energy CEO, said: “Atlas is leading in the new trend of providing clean energy directly to large energy consumers. The forms of supply are being transformed, making clean sources available to large companies, thus reducing their carbon footprint and production costs.

“Atlas is proud of pioneering, once again, the bilateral solar PPA in a new Latin American country. Our team was the first to implement a solar Private PPA in Chile some eight years ago, and now we do so in Brazil. We would like to acknowledge and congratulate Anglo American’s leadership for their commitment to become a more sustainable institution.”

ICMM’s Butler talks tailings on anniversary of Brumadinho collapse

One year on from the Brumadinho dam collapse, ICMM CEO, Tom Butler, says the mining industry may have made progress with how it operates, but it still has much more to do to on the environmental, social and governance front.

The collapse, which reportedly killed 270 people, was attributed to poor internal drainage and intense rain among other factors, Vale said back in December.

In a statement, he said: “The dam collapse at Vale’s Corrego do Feijão mine in Brumadinho, Brazil, on January 25, 2019, was a human and environmental tragedy. One year on, we remember the victims of this catastrophic event and our thoughts are with those who have lost loved ones.

“The anniversary is a stark reminder that, while the mining and metals industry has come a long way in improving how it operates, there is still much more to do to safeguard lives, improve its environmental performance and demonstrate transparency.

“Shortly after the disaster, in an effort to drive change and establish best practice, the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) co-convened the Global Tailings Review to establish an international standard for the safer management of tailings storage facilities. The Global Tailings Standard, once endorsed by all three co-conveners, will be published later this year. The standard will become a commitment of ICMM membership and we will encourage others to join us in advocating for it to be adopted more broadly across the industry.

“In addition, ICMM is taking action by working in partnership – with technology providers, experts and researchers – to promote innovation in the monitoring and surveillance of tailings storage facilities and the development of alternative methods of mineral recovery to significantly reduce or eliminate the generation of tailings.”