Teck’s tank-based water treatment plant is an engineering marvel. Thomas Davidson shows the inner workings. James Snell/The Free Press

Teck’s tank-based water treatment plant is an engineering marvel. Thomas Davidson shows the inner workings. James Snell/The Free Press

Teck Resources streamlining water treatment

By James Snell - reporter@thefreepress.ca

  • Oct. 3, 2019 12:00 a.m.

By James Snell – reporter@thefreepress.ca

Teck Resources Ltd. has four operating steelmaking coal mines in the Elk Valley, producing approximately 26 million tonnes of steelmaking coal a year. Most of the product is shipped to the Asia-Pacific region via ports on the West Coast.

Standing on the edge of the Natal West pit is like staring into an abyss of other-world-like technical amazement. The hole is 1.5 kilometres across and 500 metres deep. A three-story drill, which looks the size of an insect from above, works at the bottom of the pit, drilling 12-inch diameter holes that’ll be packed with nitrate-based explosives. Over the next few hours, technicians will prepare to blast a huge slab of sedimentary rock. Roughly 90 per cent of the rubble will be hauled away as backfill. The rest is varying grades of steelmaking coal.

The coal is scooped into massive dump trucks, conveyed to the valley bottom, cleaned, stored in silos, and loaded onto trains. It takes a small army to keep the mines safe and productive.

Recognized as one of Canada’s top 100 employers in 2019, the company infuses millions of dollars a year into local, provincial and federal economies.

These days, Teck is doing much more than extracting coal and maintaining safety. They’re also moving mountains for the environment. As technology advances, so does Teck’s ability to detect and manage the unwanted substances associated with coal mining. Two in particular are of significant concern to local waterways. The first is selenium, an element that’s critical for animal life in tiny concentrations, but harmful at higher concentrations. The other is nitrate, which comes from mine explosives. Selenium is concentrated mainly through snowmelt, as water passes through waste rock piles. It can take approximately eight years for water to migrate from the top of Teck’s rock piles to the bottom. The mine influenced water then makes its way into area rivers. It can affect aquatic invertebrates, fish, and subsequently the watershed’s ecosystem.

According to a 2013 Elk River Alliance presentation, selenium levels in the Elk River are “generally between B.C. Aquatic Life Guidelines and sometimes above drinking water guidelines.” The presentation suggested that selenium levels were rising between eight and 10 per cent a year, but Sparwood drinking water levels, at the time, did not exceed guidelines.

In 2018, The Free Press reported that Teck issued a public notice advising surface and shallow groundwater users along the Fording and Elk rivers that concentrations of some mine-related constituents may be elevated.

Initial results showed six of the 92 wells sampled between 2014-17 “slightly exceeded” the provincial water guideline for selenium.

Thomas Davidson, Superintendent – Water Operations, is one of Teck’s foot soldiers in the battle against selenium and nitrate. He says it’s a battle he and the company are winning. Davidson and his colleagues are responsible for the construction and operation of Teck’s $170 million, tank-based, water treatment plant, which is located adjacent to West Line Creek. The facility harnesses biological processes to purify the creek. It also serves as an ongoing research base to expand the technology to other areas and mine sites.

Teck recently invited members of the media on site to tour its facilities, which included the Elkview mine site and water treatment facility.

The treatment process converts nitrate into harmless nitrogen gas, and transforms selenium into a solid, disposable form. “Approximately 1.8 kilograms of selenium per day,” Davidson explains. “We process around 6000 cubic metres of water a day, which can contain up to 250 parts per billion selenium. The outflow is less than 15 parts per billion.”

Davidson says that effluent samples are sent to certified third-party labs for independent verification of selenium levels.

“[But] Our monitoring program is really robust,” he says. “We have a lot of data.”

Teck is actively expanding its tank-based water treatment to its other mine sites.

Based on the success of the West Line Creek tank-based water treatment plant, Teck has transposed their science and technology to a Saturated Rock Fill (SRF) in the active mine site and waste rock area of Elkview Mine.

The 20-month-old SRF project also uses naturally occurring biological processes to remove selenium and nitrate from the water-saturated back-filled pit. The in situ method does not require an extensive industrial facility. Rather, a series of high volume injection and extraction wells are used in the treatment process. Mine influenced water is injected into the waste rock pile. Clean water is extracted and discharged. SRF is less energy intensive and lower cost.

Dean Runzer, General Manager – Water Quality at Teck said the SRF site pumps in 10,000 cubic metres of water per day, and pumps out the same volume of treated water.

“We are able to monitor the water as it gets pumped,” he explains. “When we pump in the mine influenced water with selenium and nitrate into that first well, within seven and a half metres, 95 per cent of the selenium and nitrate are removed.”

Davidson said the only problem with the SRF pilot project is that it works too well.

“The reaction is much faster and much better than we thought,” he said. “It’s really awesome.”

Runzer said there is no residual waste using SRF. “It stays in the ground,” he said. “And there’s great potential to even triple the capacity [of the SRF technology].”

Nic Milligan, Manager of Social Responsibility with Teck said the company is entering the second phase of the SRF pilot project.

“As we move from 10,000 cubic metres a day, to 20,000, we are proving it up as a viable technology for replacement of active water treatment,” he explained. “It’s less energy intensive, quicker to build, easier to operate, and there’s less management intervention. And as you’ve seen, we are pretty good at digging big holes and filling them in again.”

“We see Saturated Rock Fill as the future of water treatment technology in the region,” he said.


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