Title: Kennecott and the Environment
1Kennecott and the Environment
- Brad Rossman
- Matt Schramm
- Jason Shiring
2Kennecott Utah Copper
- When Is The Area First Discovered?
- How Was The Mineral Deposit Found In Utah?
3Kennecott Utah Copper
- As the Years Passed
- The New Method of Mining
- The Utah Copper Mine
Picture from http//www.kennecott.com/history_mi
ning_story2.html
4Kennecott Utah Copper
Picture from http//www.kennecott.com/history_mi
ning_story2.html
5Kennecott Utah Copper
- The Little Problem.
- The Bingham Canyon Mines Are Booming.
- The New Energy Source.
Picture from http//www.kennecott.com/history_mi
ning_story3.html
6Kennecott Utah Copper
- Kennecott Copper Corporation.
- Utah Copper Corporation President Retires.
- From The Past To The Future.
7The Geology
- Bingham Canyon
- Worlds largest Cu mine
- Porphyry copper deposit
- How is it formed?
- Major rock type
- Chalcopyrite (see picture at right)
Voynick, Steve. Rock and Gem online Bingham
Canyon copper. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.rockhounds
.com/rockgem/articles/bingham_canyon.htmlgt.
8The Geology (cont)
- History behind the area that contains the canyon
- Originally a shallow sea 300 MYA
- Forces around 60 130 MYA caused this seabed to
fold and eventually form the Oquirrh Mountains as
they are today
Voynick, Steve. Rock and Gem online Bingham
Canyon copper. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.rockhounds
.com/rockgem/articles/bingham_canyon.htmlgt.
9The Geology (cont)
- Bingham Canyon
- AKA The richest hole on earth
- Why?
- Not only copper is found there
- Gold (620 tons)
- Silver (5000 tons)
- Lead (significant)
- Molybdenum (610 million pounds)
- Platinum (significant)
- Palladium (significant)
- However, Cu is most abundant (CuFeS2) (Over 10
million tons)
Voynick, Steve. Rock and Gem online Bingham
Canyon copper. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.rockhounds
.com/rockgem/articles/bingham_canyon.htmlgt.
10The Geology (cont)
- The canyon itself is an engineering masterpiece
- Stretches more than 2.5 miles across
- Covers over 2000 acres of land
- More than a half a mile deep
- Space
- Sears tower at 1454 feet
Voynick, Steve. Rock and Gem online Bingham
Canyon copper. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.rockhounds
.com/rockgem/articles/bingham_canyon.htmlgt.
11The Geology (cont)
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12The Geology (cont)
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13How is the copper produced
- Step 1 The rock is blasted from the walls of
the canyon and moved to a rock (0.6) crusher
within the canyon (10) - Step 2 The 10 fragments are crushed into a
fine powder using SAG and ball mills outside of
the mine - Step 3 This powder is mixed with water, several
chemicals, and then saturated with air in large
floatation cells (28)
Kennecott Utah Copper. Copper how we produce
Copper. 2000. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.kennecott.c
om/copper_how_produce.htmlgt.
14How is the copper produced (cont)
- Step 4 - The Cu solution is pumped to the
smelting plant 3 components arise (the copper
matte (70 Cu), sulfur gases, and slag - Step 5 - This Cu matte is sent to a flash
furnace where the impurities are burned off (98
Cu) - Step 6 Using electricity and the electrical
properties of Cu, the Cu is further purified to
the final product (99.99 Cu)
- Smelting
- Dehydrate
- Separate chemicals based on their melting point
Ministry of Energy and Mines. Mining terminology
and definitions. 17 Jul 2000. 15 March 2005.
lthttp//www.em.gov.bc.ca/Mining/MiningStats/03mine
term.htmgt.
Kennecott Utah Copper. Copper how we produce
Copper. 2000. 13 Mar 2005 lthttp//www.kennecott.c
om/copper_how_produce.htmlgt.
15Cu toxicity
- Yes and No
- Too much of a good thing
- Human example
- Recommended - 0.9 mg Cu in diet/day
- Threshold level - over 10 mg Cu/day
- Cu is a component of about 30 enzymes in the
human body - Goes for all organisms however the numbers vary
greatly from species to species
Dartmouth College. Dartmouth toxic metal
research Toxic metals. 09 Feb 2005. 13 Mar
2005 lthttp//www.dartmouth.edu/toxmetal/TXQAcu.sh
tmlgt.
16Cu toxicity
- Many ponds around mines are polluted with Cu and
can release excess Cu into the surrounding
streams - Too much Cu to the ecosystem
- Many organisms die as a result of overexposure
(hit threshold levels) - Nervous System Failure
- Liver Failure
- Kidney Failure
- Cu blocks bio-pathways when in high concentrations
Dartmouth College. Dartmouth toxic metal
research Toxic metals. 09 Feb 2005. 13 Mar
2005 lthttp//www.dartmouth.edu/toxmetal/TXQAcu.sh
tmlgt.
17Environmental Reform
- EPA formed by Nixon in 1970
- Clean Air Act (1970)
- Clean Water Act (1977)
- Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) AKA
Superfund Act (1980)EPA.gov - Set limitations and prohibitions for hazardous
waste sites - Set liability for owners of sites that released
hazardous waste - Set trust fund for cleanup
United States Environmental Protection Agency.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 15 March
2005. 16 March 2005. lthttp//www.epa.govgt
18Hypothesis
- Environmental regulations are very costly for
mining companies to comply with.
19Some basic regulations on copper
- EPA - Safe drinking water act
- 10 LBS Cupric Sulfate in one area Superfund
- 5000 LBS Cu in one area Superfund
- Only allow 1.3mg per liter Cu in public drinking
water - US FDA
- 1 mg per liter Cu in bottled water
- OSHA
- Strict regulations on Cu fumes and other sources
in mines
Dartmouth College. Dartmouth toxic metal
research Toxic metals. 09 Feb 2005. 13 Mar
2005 lthttp//www.dartmouth.edu/toxmetal/TXQAcu.sh
tmlgt.
20Kennecott vs. Superfund
- In 1990, EPA found that Utah homes had been built
on flood plains contaminated - Water plumes
Christensen, John. Can a Copper Firm Restore a
Blasted Ecosystem? High Country News. 30 May
1994. 15 March 2005. lthttp//www.hcn.org/servlets/
hcn.Article?article_id368gt
21 - 1991 Kennecott engaged in controversy
- 12 million deal to replace water
- Salt Lake County Water Conservancy District
- Kennecott called to reform its practices, not
merely to buy off its pollution - Massive corporation stood up to
Christensen, John. Can a Copper Firm Restore a
Blasted Ecosystem? High Country News. 30 May
1994. 15 March 2005. lthttp//www.hcn.org/servlets/
hcn.Article?article_id368gt
22 - In 1994, Kennecott pit proposed to be added to
EPAs Superfund site list - Kennecott opposed this because
Christensen, John. Can a Copper Firm Restore a
Blasted Ecosystem? High Country News. 30 May
1994. 15 March 2005. lthttp//www.hcn.org/servlets/
hcn.Article?article_id368gt
23 - the EPA would have authority to manage the
cleanup itself, forcing Kennecott to comply with
tough guidelines, and sue for non-compliance for
triple damages - Superfund liability extends to pollution that was
formerly legal when it occurred, which accounts
for the generations of pre-EPA pollution - in extreme circumstances, however unlikely, the
EPA could forcibly close the mine - Superfund listing creates a massive stigma
Christensen, John. Can a Copper Firm Restore a
Blasted Ecosystem? High Country News. 30 May
1994. 15 March 2005. lthttp//www.hcn.org/servlets/
hcn.Article?article_id368gt
24 - In 1995, Kennecott, the EPA and the State of Utah
came to an agreement Kennecott was allowed to
clean itself up, albeit under the EPAs close
watch - Kennecott remains on the National Priorities List
(NPL) as proposed, and the EPA will defer final
listing unless Kennecott fails to clean up
sufficiently
Bruninga, Susan and Meredith Preston. At Senate
Hearing, Leavitt Shows Support For Rules
Reforming New Source Review. The Bureau of
National Affairs. 26 September 2003. 15 March
2005. lthttp//ehscenter.bna.com/pic2/ehs.nsf/id/BN
AP-5RRG76?OpenDocumentgt
25Kennecott Reforms
- As of 2003, Kennecott has spent 290 million on
cleanups of surface waste, and have removed more
than 25 million tons of it, removing a great deal
of historic waste. - 2 billion on modernizing equipment
- Construction of new smelter that is cleaner than
required by current regulations - Canals and filters to siphon minerals from leech
water
Quinn, Sherri. Can Kennecott Be Trusted?
Catalyst. 14 March 2005. lt www.catalystmagazine.ne
t/issues/story.cfm?story110gt
26Great Sacrifice?
- 290 million on cleanup 2 billion in
updatesvs. - 400-600 billion annual profits
Quoth Kennecott
Christensen, John. Can a Copper Firm Restore a
Blasted Ecosystem? High Country News. 30 May
1994. 15 March 2005. lthttp//www.hcn.org/servlets/
hcn.Article?article_id368gt
27Bingham Canyon
http//maps.epa.gov/scripts/.esrimap?nameenviroMa
pperNCmdPrintMapCmdOldZoomInByScalarmapTitle
Bingham20Canyonthreshold0.3zoomFactor8.0laye
rsCode1111111000010101queryCode2fipsCode08816
click.x300click.y200IndexMaponLeft-112.260
72Bottom40.47880Right-112.06692Top40.62415
28Conclusion
- Kennecott has made environmental reform a
priority, and a public focus, though not
voluntarily. - Environmental agencies have created a severe
punishment for failing to meet standards, yet
Kennecott still treads the line.