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Mines getting greener despite challenges

2015-03-13 16:14 Xinhua Web Editor: Gu Liping
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Wang De'an, a miner at China's largest open-pit copper mine, was pleased to see that the pungent, yellow Dawu River was much clearer this year.

Wang, 58, who works at Dexing Copper Mine in east China's Jiangxi Province, has watched the water quality deteriorate over the past few decades.

"Thirty years ago, we did not treat our wastewater," said Wang, adding that, sometimes, it was dumped straight into the river.

Since the 1980s, the mine has channeled 740 million yuan (120 million U.S. dollars) to support environmental protection efforts and was among China's first batch of 37 "national-level green mine pilot enterprises" in 2011. These enterprises tested scientific exploitation, efficient use of resources, standardized management, environment-friendly production and mine environment standards.

"The key to environmental protection at the mine is the treatment of wastewater," said Guan Yongmin, head of the mine.

Drainage ditches and large acidic reservoirs were built to separate rainwater from wastewater, explained Guan.

It has also developed a process to extract thousands of tons of copper, stones and other waste materials, called tailings, from wastewater, he said.

More than 80 percent of the 492 hectares of waste land at the mine have been converted into green spaces, with plants growing on the tailings, he added.

Government supervision and public complaints about pollution have forced the mines to go green.

In this year's government work report, Premier Li Keqiang said the government would fight to conserve energy, reduce emissions and improve the environment.[Special coverage]

The Ministry of Land and Resources has approved 661 mines to be national-level green mine pilot enterprises.

The experiences of pilot enterprises will be disseminated to large- and medium-sized mines so that all can achieve green mine standards by 2020. Small-sized mines will also be managed according to the green mine standards.

However, the 661 pilot enterprises are minimal compared with the 100,000 mines across the country.

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