Anglo American pledges $162m for Australian coal mine rehabilitation

By Daniel Brightmore
Anglo American has announced it will invest over $162m in the next five years to boost the rehabilitation efforts of its Australian mining operations...

Anglo American has announced it will invest over $162m in the next five years to boost the rehabilitation efforts of its Australian mining operations.

The diversified miner’s operations include five metallurgical coal mines in Queensland, made up of two opencut and three underground operations.

Anglo has earmarked $82m on rehabilitating its opencut Dawson mine and a further $40m on the Capcoal opencut mine.

Anglo American’s Metallurgical Coal chief executive officer Tyler Mitchelson commented: “We continue to innovate and pursue best practice mine rehabilitation across our business, and this approach is already delivering outstanding results. Anglo American’s Dawson Mine has been leading the way in innovative rehabilitation approaches, including the successful rehabilitation of an area previously containing void highwall, and use of rehabilitated land for cattle grazing.”

Related stories:

Anglo American restarts iron-ore operation at Minas-Rio, Brazil

BHP invests $6m in emissions reduction company, Carbon Engineering

Anglo American posts strong fourth quarter results - copper production ramps 23%

Read the latest issue of Mining Global here

Meanwhile, the BHP Mitsubishi Alliance (BMA) has been granted environmental certification from the Queensland government on two plots of land spanning almost 1500 hectares in the Bowen basin, including a 1176-hectare stretch of land related to the Gregory Crinum underground mine near Emerald (the largest tract of mining-affected land certified by the state government) and a 294-hectare tract at the Norwich Park mine.

BMA asset president James Palmer stated: “It’s been a fantastic effort by our team, who’ve worked closely with the department to ensure its stringent rehabilitation standards have been met. BMA is committed to its responsibilities to rehabilitate the land within its mining leases, and we continue to collaborate with the Department on further progressive certification. Queenslanders want to know that miners’ take their responsibilities to the environment seriously.”

Share

Featured Articles

GEM: Non-China Coal Power Sees First Growth Since 2019

Global Energy Monitor 2024 global coal Tracker shows less coal-power capacity was retired in 2023 than for a decade but that trend will be 'short lived'

Biden Ruling 'Threat to US Critical Minerals Mining'

The Essential Minerals Association says Biden's Public Lands Rule is threat to critical minerals mining industry and compromises move to clean energy

Thermo Fisher Scientific Tackling Lithium eco Issue

Thermo Fisher Scientific's Dan Shine, on how the company's sodium battery tech can help reduce the mining of critical minerals like lithium for EVs

EC on Importance of Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability

EU & US form Critical Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability

World Gold Council: Gold Miners 'Must Create ESG Value'

Sustainability