Tag Archives: South Crofty

Bredel, Qdos peristaltic pumps help decontaminate mine water at Cornish Metals’ new water treatment plant

Cornish Metals Inc is using eight Bredel 40 hose pumps and three Qdos chemical metering and dosing pumps from Watson-Marlow Fluid Technology Solutions (WMFTS) in its newly opened water treatment plant (WTP) at the South Crofty tin mine in Cornwall, England.

South Crofty ceased producing tin in 1998 but Cornish Metals is working to reopen it, aiming to reinstate production by 2026. Before Cornish Metals can begin extracting tin, it must dewater the flooded mine and treat 8 million cu.m of contaminated water so that it meets standards set by the Environment Agency. The treated, clean water is then discharged into the nearby Red River at a rate of up to 25,000 cu.m/d.

As part of the process to decontaminate water pumped out of the underground tin mine, the Bredel pumps are used for transferring sludge, while the Qdos pumps are dosing hydrogen peroxide to oxidise the contaminated metals in the mine water at the WTP. Cornish Metals expects the dewatering of South Crofty to take 18 months.

Qdos is accurately dosing hydrogen peroxide during the cleaning of the contaminated mine water, to oxidise the metals and cause iron and arsenic to precipitate out of the solution, in the first of five process steps at the WTP. Bredel hose pumps provide the process with reliable, low maintenance and contained transfer of thick sludge – containing contaminants such as iron, manganese and arsenic – which is separated from the treated water in stages two and four. The Bredel hose pumps are transferring sludge out from the lamella clarifier into a tank, where the sludge is thickened, and then pumping the thickened sludge to another tank from where it is transported to a nearby site for underground storage.

Steven Kingstone, South Crofty Project Manager at Cornish Metals, said: “We are lucky in Cornwall to have a number of suppliers such as Watson-Marlow, producing high quality equipment that we can utilise in the reconstruction of South Crofty mine. This highlights the importance that we place on buying local where we can, which ensures that the reopening of South Crofty benefits the local population and economy as much as possible. As the site develops, we look forward to continuing to work with Watson-Marlow.”

Bredel and Qdos pumps, from WMFTS, are contributing to the WTP’s goal of minimising South Crofty’s impact on the local environment, according to the company. Before start-up of the WTP in October 2023, the Red River received untreated mine water as a legacy of past mining activities.

A cleaner and healthier Red River will benefit people, wildlife and the local economy, WMFTS says. Also, the water discharged from South Crofty powers a hydro-turbine that generates up to 15% of the power consumed by the WTP.

Bredel hose pumps accommodate continuous flow rates up to 108 cu.m/h and are extremely durable (pressures up to 16 bar), WMFTS says. There are no internal universal joints, valves, dead corners or glands to impact flow, and they are reversible for back-flushing. Bredel hose pumps can handle undiluted mine water, tailings and thickener underflow with up to 80% solids.

Pumps like those in the Bredel range are virtually maintenance-free, according to the manufacturer, as there are no impellers, liners or mechanical seals to replace, no check valves to clog and no rotors or stators to wear out. The only wear part is the hose, which can be replaced in a matter of minutes with no special tools, it says.

Qdos pumps are also low maintenance – reducing the impact of process downtime and lowering the overall cost of ownership – while providing accurate, linear and repeatable chemical metering across all process conditions, it says. Chemical costs can be reduced by higher accuracy metering, with flow rates that remain constant from 0.1 to 2,000 mL/min at up to 7 bar.

South Crofty pre-con, ore sorting test work implies improved project economics, Cornish Metals says

Cornish Metals Inc has received results back from TOMRA Sorting GmbH that indicate X-ray Transmission (XRT) sensor-based sorting could be a viable option for its South Crofty tin project in the UK.

The feasibility study on South Crofty, a iconic former producing copper and tin mine with first documented production history dating back to 1592, is advancing on schedule with a substantial amount of the study completed, Cornish Metals said. The mine was the last tin operation in Cornwall to close in 1998.

Metallurgical test work and heavy liquid separation (HLS) pre-concentration test work provided “excellent results”, the company said.

Conducted on samples from the 2023 metallurgical drill program across five mineralised zones (No. 4 Lode, No. 8 Lode, Roskear B/D Lodes, North Pool Zone and Dolcoath South), it represented the majority of the potential production areas in the first six years of the proposed mine life, according to Cornish Metals.

The XRT work came back with a 55% mass rejection and less than 3% metal loss (-50 mm – +15 mm size fraction), while the HLS testing saw a 50% mass rejection and lesss than 5% metal loss (-15 mm – +0.85 mm size fraction).

The XRT ore sorter test work of bulk composite samples was completed by TOMRA Sorting GmbH, with the HLS test work of bulk composite samples completed by Wardell Armstrong International.

Cornish Metals said: “The test work results confirm the upgrading potential of South Crofty mineralisation and enables continuation of the process design optimisation work to reduce the size of the mineral processing plant and materially lower capital costs, operating costs and environmental footprint.”

Richard Williams, CEO and Director of Cornish Metals, said the company expected the mineralisation at South Crofty to respond well to XRT ore sorting, but these results exceeded “our most optimistic expectations”.

He added: “We expect this result will have a positive effect on the project economics, allowing for lower power consumption and a smaller process plant and therefore lower capital and operating costs.”

In addition to ore sorting test work, the following feasibility study components have also been completed:

  • Headframe structural modelling and refurbishment;
  • Schedule and costing for the refurbishment and recommissioning of New Cooks Kitchen and New Roskear shafts;
  • Televiewer investigations and geotechnical rock testing to confirm known historical structural and rock mass property data;
  • Conceptual numerical modelling of the proposed underground mining methods and stope designs. Back analysis supports historical operating data. Ground conditions and excavation stability are expected to be very good;
  • Phase 1 of the metallurgical testwork program (mineralogy, physical competency, characterisation and gravity response test work). The gravity response results are very good and confirm previous operational results;
  • Concept engineering on paste backfill options and sighter test work; and
  • Ground investigations for the new mineral processing plant.

The following dtudy components are currently underway:

  • Mineral processing plant design, layout and capital cost study, incorporating the results of the metallurgical test work program reported today and potential future throughput expansions;
  • Underground mine design and optimisation using the latest South Crofty resource estimate published in September 2023;
  • A mine ventilation study, underground infrastructure design and hoisting analysis;
  • A feasibility study-level engineering design for the paste backfill plant;
  • Hydrogeology, environmental, social, marketing and closure studies; and
  • AMC Mining Consultants has been appointed to independently review and compile the feasibility study with initial gap analysis and site visits completed.

Strongbow gains local council backing for South Crofty mine re-start plan

Cornwall Council has voted overwhelmingly in support of a £1 million ($1.3 million) investment into Strongbow Exploration, according to the tin-focused company.

The news follows a press release late last year that stated the council had voted unanimously in favour of the proposed investment, subject to Strongbow adding a dual listing on the London’s AIM exchange to its existing Toronto listing.

Richard Williams, Strongbow CEO, said: “We welcome this very positive decision for the project, which reflects the high level of cooperation between the local community, Cornwall Council and Strongbow, where all parties share the common goal of responsible mine development in an urban environment and high quality job creation.

“We look forward to advancing the project to a production decision.”

Cornwall Council Cabinet Portfolio Holder for Planning and Economy, Bob Egerton, said: “Cornwall has a global reputation for exporting expertise and knowledge in mining and the council is clear in its desire to support this sector to re-start production in Cornwall and bring with it much needed high-value jobs. If successful, restarting mining at South Crofty could create over 300 jobs and make a real difference to an area with high levels of deprivation.”

South Crofty is an iconic former producing copper and tin mine located in the towns of Camborne and Pool, Cornwall, England. The first documented production history from South Crofty dates back to 1592, and it was the last tin mine to close in Cornwall in 1998.

The project received an underground permission (mining licence) in 2013, which is valid until 2071, and planning permission to construct a new process plant in 2011. In October 2017, Strongbow was successful in securing a water discharge permit allowing for the dewatering of the now flooded mine workings.

Strongbow is now focused on completing the listing on AIM and completion of the water treatment plant so the mine can be dewatered. Strongbow plans to bring the project to a production decision and complete a feasibility study in parallel with the mine dewatering process.

A 2017 preliminary economic assessment on South Crofty outlined an eight-year project that mined 2.575 Mt of mineralised material with an average grade of 1.55% Sn-equivalent. Strongbow estimated it would require $118.7 million in pre-production capital expenditure to get the mine re-started.