IM 2020 July/August 20 | Page 10

CYANIDE REDUCTION/REPLACEMENT Reduce or replace? The ReCYN II plant at the Martabe mine in Indonesia will fit into the 5.5 Mt/y circuit and treat around 1.2 t/d of copper, GreenGold’s Peter Mellor says As mining looks to clean up its act in the face of environmental and social governance concerns, the use of cyanide is, again, being scrutinised. Dan Gleeson looks at some technologies eradicating or reducing its use in metal extraction processes The mere mention of cyanide has, in the last few decades, proven enough to push economically viable mining projects off the development slate. There are enough stories about cyanide management gone wrong to turn communities against mine developers at key approval stages. This is on top of outright bans on the use of cyanide in countries such as Germany, Czech Republic and Hungary, and states and provinces in North and South America. For all the financial and operational benefits that come with using cyanide, the industry understands the lixiviant’s years are numbered. This has been highlighted by a number of companies exposed to the chemical making concerted moves away from its use. Competing with cyanide EnviroLeach Technologies is helping facilitate such moves, with the Canada-based company coming up with a patented chemical compound that, it says, is “superior” to cyanide and its alternatives and comes with no negative environmental impacts. In fact, the company states the chemistry ingredients are FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) approved for human consumption. The closed-loop process offers an almost zero environmental footprint, with no off gassing, no water effluent, and no landfilling of any waste materials, according to the company. Using its non-cyanide, water-based, neutral pH treatment process, EnviroLeach extracts precious metals from ores and concentrates using a proprietary chemistry technology at ambient temperature. The process is effective on most gold ores and concentrates, the company says, potentially unlocking the value of many deposits located in environmentally sensitive areas that cannot be developed using conventional extraction methods. Jason Leikam, VP Corporate Development at EnviroLeach Technologies, says the applicable market for the company’s technology in mining is vast, which has been proven in test work on reallife ores and concentrates. “The mining industry is ripe for disruption,” Leikam said. “An increased focus on sustainability and social licence to operate, coupled with environmental and social governance (ESG) and Impact investment factors, all contribute to push a mandate for innovation. “EnviroLeach is uniquely positioned for the evolution of the industry. Our extraction process is not only sustainable, but economically viable. Applying our technology can reduce permitting processes and improve project economics. That means time and money for operators who are subject to inherent cyclical industry risk.” Back in February, the company released results of EnviroLeach test work carried out from 2019 field testing at Golden Predator Mining’s Secondary Recovery Unit (SRU™) at its Yukon test processing plant. The SRU is a mobile batch recovery unit for the recovery of gold from its sulphide concentrate, according to Golden Predator. Eleven test batches totalling around 2 t of a previously announced 5 t test sample from Golden Predator’s then-owned 3 Aces gold project, in the Yukon, resulted in 93.17% recovery of contained gold, yielding 132.23 oz of gold doré. Recoveries improved as the tests advanced with the final five test batches yielding an average of 96.8% gold recovery, according to Golden Predator and EnviroLeach. Golden Predator said these results confirmed processing and recovering environmentally friendly gold from high-grade sulphide concentrate can be achieved with greater efficiency than cyanide. EnviroLeach’s Leikam went a step further, saying the efficiency and cost-effective nature of the company’s technology meant it could put a significant dent in the cyanide sector’s metal extraction market share. “EnviroLeach has demonstrated time and again that our technology leach efficacy is either comparable or superior to cyanide vat leaching,” he said. “We achieve high recoveries and, in many cases, are faster than cyanide. “Our chemistry is also recoverable and recyclable, which translates into chemistry cost reductions over time. We are cost competitive with cyanide vat leaching of gravity and flotation concentrates.” The more EnviroLeach test work carried out, the wider the applicability and more favourable the metal recoveries appear to be, with the Golden Predator program demonstrating the chemistry works well with arsenopyrite concentrates, according to the company. Leikam, on this development, said: “This can be a game changer for many projects that are otherwise unable to process concentrates with high arsenic values. It broadens our applicability to include an untapped niche market.” Another case in point is the recent agreement 8 International Mining | JULY/AUGUST 2020