Mining Association of Canada forms tailings management task force

The Mining Association of Canada commissions independent, multi-stakeholder expert task force to review its tailings management requirement.

  • Mar. 17, 2015 7:00 a.m.

The Mining Association of Canada (MAC) announced Tuesday it has commissioned an independent, multi-stakeholder expert task force to review its tailings management requirements and guidance documents under its Towards Sustainable Mining (TSM) initiative, a mandatory program for all MAC members, to ensure they are as effective as they can be at preventing tailings dam failures and optimizing the design, construction and ongoing management of tailings storage facilities. MAC plans to publish the task force’s final report by the end of 2015.

The formation of the independent task force is part of MAC’s ongoing review of its tailings management program, which it proactively initiated immediately following the Aug. 4, 2014 tailings breach at the Mount Polley mine, MAC said in a press release.

The task force will review TSM’s tailings management requirements and MAC’s three tailings management guides, and will advise on how these can be enhanced and strengthened. The findings and recommendations of the BC independent expert engineering investigation and review panel’s report, released in late January, will be assessed by the task force as part of its review.

One of the B.C. panel’s key recommendations pertaining to corporate governance was that any mining operation proposing to operate a tailings storage facility in B.C. should either be required to be a member of MAC—ensuring adherence to TSM—or be obliged to commit to an equivalent program that would also include an audit function. Notwithstanding this endorsement, the MAC Board of Directors believes that a review to consider further enhancements to and strengthening of the tailings component of TSM is warranted.

“The Towards Sustainable Mining initiative, along with the mining industry’s prioritization of tailings management, has contributed to a strong record of the safe operation, management, closure and aftercare of tailings facilities in recent decades. At the same time, we believe there is always room for improvement and we are committed to learning from the Mount Polley incident with the goal of ensuring we never have another one,” said Pierre Gratton, President and CEO, MAC. “The Canadian mining industry is committed to doing everything it can to ensure the safety and protection of the environment and communities around our sites. If anything can be changed within the TSM system to improve safety, we want to know about it.”

The independent task force will be chaired by Doug Horswill, a former chair of MAC’s board of directors and former senior vice president of sustainability and external affairs at Teck Resources Limited.

The task force will include the following representatives, two geotechnical engineers Peter Ligthall, independent consultant, formerly with AMEC and Klohn Crippen, Dr. John Sobkowicz, Thurber Engineering Ltd. Representing First Nations and Envirionmental Engineering will be Nalaine Morin part of the Tahltan Heritage Resources Environmental Assessment Team, representing Environmental/Community Perspectives, Alan Young, International Boreal Conservation Campaign and member of MAC’s Community of Interest Advisory Panel Management Systems/TSM Expertise, for the Environmental/Community Perspectives, Dr. Craig Ford, Corporate Responsibility Solutions Inc., executive in residence at the Schulich School of Business, and for Tailings Management  Dr. Michael Davies, Teck Resources Limited and chair of MAC’s tailings working group

Dirk Van Zyl, who served on the B.C. panel, will serve as a special advisor to the task force.

“As a member of MAC, we are pleased to see this initiative brought forward,” said Pierre Lebel, chairman of Imperial Metals Corporation. “Now that the cause of the failure has been identified, the industry is looking into all associated aspects of dam safety and design to prevent this type of failure from ever occurring again.”

Horswill described it is a privilege to be part of an “important” review, which continues to demonstrate the Canadian mining industry’s commitment to dam safety.

“The task force will work over the coming months to ensure that TSM and MAC’s tailings guides continue to be effective in the management of tailings facilities across Canada,” Horswill said. “If improvements to TSM’s tailings requirements and guidance can be made in light of the findings from the BC panel’s report, I am confident that the task force’s team of experts will be able to identify them for immediate incorporation.”

TSM is a mandatory program for MAC members, and its requirements go well beyond regulatory obligations. It is designed to improve industry’s operational performance in key environmental and social areas, including tailings management, and it includes third-party verification of reported results. Both the Mining Association of British Columbia and the Quebec Mining Association have recently adopted TSM and are working with their members on implementation. A major component of TSM includes commitments to ensure the safe operation and management of tailings. I

“In fact, one of the main drivers behind the development of TSM in the late 1990s was to ensure tailings dam safety through strong tailings management practices. Since TSM’s launch in 2004, MAC members have made steady improvement in this area,” the press release noted.

 

 

Williams Lake Tribune