Ok Tedi Mine

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The Ok Tedi Mine
File:New guinea ok tedi mine.PNG
Location of the mine

The Ok Tedi Mine is an open-pit copper and gold mine in Papua New Guinea located near the headwaters of the Ok Tedi River, in the Star Mountains Rural LLG of the North Fly District of the Western Province of Papua New Guinea. Discharges from the mine have caused widespread and diverse harm, both environmentally and socially, to the 50,000 people who live in the 120 villages downstream of the mine.

The mine is operated by Ok Tedi Mining Limited (OTML) which is majority owned by the PNG Sustainable Development Program Limited (PNGSDPL). Prior to 2002, it was majority owned by BHP Billiton—the largest mining company in the world since a merger in 2001.

Located in a remote area of PNG, above 2,000 m (6,600 ft) on Mount Fubilan, in a region of high rainfall and frequent earthquakes, mine development posed serious challenges.[1] The town of Tabubil was built to serve the mining operation.

History

Before mining operations Mount Fubilan was a copper mountain with a gold cap.

Exploratory drilling in the area began in the 1970s, and was run by the Kennecott Copper Corporation.

In the early 80s, BHP (now BHP Billiton) secured a mining lease and in 1984, began exploiting a gold cap on the mountain using cyanide extraction procedures. After the gold deposit was depleted, a much larger copper deposit was targeted underneath. At that time, this deposit was believed to be the largest copper deposit in the world.[2] BHP entered into a partnership with the Papua New Guinea government, Amoco Corporation and a Canadian company, Inmet Mining Corporation, to mine the copper deposit, although BHP maintained a majority share in the mine.

Around 20 years after the beginning of mining operations, majority share ownership turned into the hands of the PNG Sustainable Development Program, in the wake of the Ok Tedi Environmental Disaster.

All mining operations at Fubilan have had their headquarters based at Tabubil.

Infrastructure

As a substantial economic entity in Papua New Guinea and the Western Province, accounting for over half of the entire province's economy[3] and 25.7% of the country's entire export earnings,[4] the mine has been responsible for a large amount of the infrastructure.

The mine

The mine works as an open cut operation and Mount Fubilan has been reduced to a deep pit in the ground.

By 31 December 2004, 8,896,577 tonnes of copper concentrate (containing 2,853,265 tonnes of copper metal and 7,035,477 troy ounces or 218.8278 tonnes of gold metal) had been mined. In addition, between 1985 and 1990, 47.642 tonnes (1,531,700 ounces) of gold bullion were produced.[5]

The mill

There is a mill adjacent to the mine that transforms the raw material mined into copper concentrate slurry. The mill operates two ball mills and one sag mill. Copper concentrate is produced as slurry and piped 137 km (85 mi) along the Kiunga-Tabubil Highway to Kiunga, the main port of the district, where it is shipped via river barge along the Fly River.

Ok Menga

The mine is powered by a hydroelectric power facility at Ok Menga, which is a tributary of the Ok Tedi river near Tabubil. There are also backup diesel generators that are used if the flow from the Ok Menga river is not enough to generate sufficient electricity.

Kiunga-Tabubil Highway

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The Kiunga-Tabubil Highway is maintained by Ok Tedi Mining Limited, as the mine is the greatest beneficiary of the road. The highway, for the most part, runs parallel with the Ok Tedi River. Parts of the highway are often consumed by the river and need to be rebuilt. The cost of maintaining this road is K1.5 million a year. The copper slurry pipeline to Kiunga from the mine runs along the full length of this road.

Tabubil

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Tabubil is a township in the North Fly District of Western Province, Papua New Guinea, about 20 km south along the Kiunga-Tabubil Highway from the minesite.[6] The town, including the adjoining relocated village of Wangbin and the industrial area of Laytown, is the largest settlement in the province.[7] Although the provincial capital, Daru, is almost the same size.[8]

The town was established primarily to serve the Ok Tedi Mine. The OTML headquarters are located in a building called the White House, which is about 500 metres south of Tabubil International School, and about 300 metres east of the Cloudlands hotel.

The mine has a backup diesel generating power facility at Tabubil.

Kiunga

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Kiunga is the port town that services the mine on the Fly River. The township, which had a population of 8,300 in the year 2000 census, is the terminus of the Kiunga-Tabubil Highway, and the copper concentrate slurry pipeline, about 140 km by road from the minesite.[6]

Local industry rests on a cornerstone of freight and haulage, particularly servicing the mine and the town of Tabubil. The town is the headquarters of the North Fly District.

Environmental impact

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In 1999, BHP reported that the project was the cause of "major environmental damage".[9] The mine operators discharge 80 million tons of contaminated tailings, overburden and mine-induced erosion into the river system each year.[10]

The discharge caused widespread and diverse harm, both environmentally and socially, to the 50,000 people who live in the 120 villages downstream of the mine.[11] Chemicals from the tailings killed or contaminated fish, which subsequently caused harm to all animal species that live in the area as well as the indigenous people. The dumping changed the riverbed, causing a relatively deep and slow river to become shallower and develop rapids thereby disrupting indigenous transportation routes. Flooding caused by the raised riverbed left a thick layer of contaminated mud on the flood plain where the plantations of taro, bananas and sago palm that are the staples of the local diet grow.

About 1300 square kilometres (500 mi²) were damaged in this way. Although the concentration of copper in the water is about 30 times above the standard level, it is still below the World Health Organization (WHO) standards.

See also

References

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External links

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