Rehabilitation
Rehabilitation
Rehabilitation
www.oresomeresources.com
‘Spoil’ is the overburden removed to reveal the coal seam. Previous spoil is piled
behind the pit. In this way, the pit advances, progressively filled with new spoil.
Rehabilitation will ultimately occur over the previous spoil behind the mine.
Direction of
advance of the pit
10 A slope of 1 in 10
A bulldozer follows the pegs to deep rip along the contours to a depth of
about one metre. This increases infiltration of water and provides a rough
surface to reduce runoff and erosion. Once grass has established itself on
this surface, the contours will completely eliminate any rainwater runoff.
Small rock walls called ‘rills’ are constructed around the rehabilitation area
to stop runoff from the mine washing away the topsoil or killing the grass.
Grass is seeded at the rate of 25kg of seed per hectare by a contract farmer.
The seed is spread by a fertiliser spreader on the back of a farm tractor.
Some mines are required to return a certain number of acacia and eucalypt
stems per square metre. At Ensham, where the land will ultimately be
restored as grazing land, trees are not always desired by farmers.
Trees can only be planted on this site after the grass is established.
Otherwise, trees can get out-competed by the grass from the outset or
trees can hold up the growth of the grass and result in erosion. The most
effective way to stabilise the slopes against erosion is with grasses.
Oresomeresources.com
Image courtesy of Ensham Resources
Environmental engineer
Some other mines have a rehabilitation requirement defined as "native self sustaining
ecosystem," so any native species able to grow on that site are encouraged.
The government provides a financial incentive to rehabilitate because the bond that
mining companies are charged for their use of the land applies only to disturbed land.
Every hectare of rehabilitation reduces this bond.
At Ensham, between 150 and 200 hectares of land are rehabilitated every year. The
company set a Queensland record in 2009 with a total of 280 hectares rehabilitated.
Oresomeresources.com
sy of Ensham Resources