The role of economic geologists in water management related to mining
The role of economic geologists in water management related to mining
SEG Discovery (July 2023) 134: 31-41
- Arequipa Peru
- Asia
- British Columbia
- Canada
- case studies
- conservation
- development
- dust storms
- environmental management
- exploration
- Far East
- ground water
- mine drainage
- mines
- mining
- mining geology
- Mongolia
- monitoring
- New Mexico
- Peru
- pollution
- practice
- Questa Mine
- remediation
- South America
- Taos County New Mexico
- United States
- water management
- water quality
- water resources
- Western Canada
- Elk Valley
- Cerro Verde Mine
- Oyu Tolgoi Project
Water has always been an important issue for mineral exploration and mining companies. In recent years, water-related issues have increasingly placed a constraint on the development of new projects, while mine closure issues have created billion-dollar legacies for governments. Water access and management creates not only project risks but also opportunities. There are opportunities for geoscientists to help mitigate water-related issues early in a development, particularly for the economic geologists who play a crucial role in gathering data and geologic understanding during the early mine life cycle. Geologists can contribute to the understanding of baseline water systems and help to mitigate the potential effects that mining may pose for local ecosystems and to the communities that depend on them.