IM 2020 July/August 20 | Page 16

CYANIDE REDUCTION/REPLACEMENT Testing to verify the process has been conducted at the Fairview operation, in South Africa, according to van Niekerk, with a demonstration ahead of a full-scale installation resulting in the 50% cyanide consumption reduction highlighted. While Fairview has been the only operation to trial the new process on a continuous basis, batch test work had been completed on several other concentrates, all of which had produced similar benefits, van Niekerk said. The highest operating cost benefits – brought about by the reduction in cyanide consumption – will be realised at those plants where ores typically require high cyanide doses for effective metal extraction via bio-oxidation, according to van Niekerk. “We’ve got some plants with a normal mesophile BIOX plant where the cyanide consumption isn’t really that high, so we wouldn’t expect to see that level (50%) of cyanide consumption reduction,” he said. “Whereas, we have some plants that have higher cyanide consumption than Fairview; that is where you will expect an even higher potential saving.” van Niekerk concluded: “Cyanide consumption has always been considered a negative aspect of bio-oxidation, so I think this will be a step change in the applicability of the process. “We’re also seeing an increase in the number of high sulphur concentrates coming through and being tested, and I think that is really where the technology will find its niche. Higher sulphur concentrates are typically harder to break down and tend to consume more cyanide. “The new process will have a big impact on the economics of processing those concentrates.” Cyanide recycling GreenGold Technology’s ReCYN process looks to reduce cyanide consumption through an innovative recycling process. The Jakarta-based company has recently been making waves, with its biggest ReCYN resin-based technology build nearing completion and several new projects on the horizon. The ReCYN technology reduces cyanide consumption by up to 50% by capturing free cyanide from plant tailings and recycling it back into the leach circuit while recovering metal complexes and making them available for sale, according to the company. In the process, it detoxifies the tailings stream and guarantees 100%-compliant clean water discharge. Such technology is in serious demand considering the industry’s operational cost focus, increased stakeholder pressure around the use of cyanide, the need to recycle and replace as much water as possible, and a necessity to improve project economics through the recovery of all payable metals. On top of this, new and existing gold projects are becoming difficult to process through conventional means with problems around byproducts such as copper often proving the difference between a sub-economic and economic mine development proposition. The ReCYN process is based on the use of a functionalised resin bead, pre-treated to allow the dual duty of recovering free and complex cyanide ions from solution with a high degree of efficiency. GreenGold works with local construction companies to customise treatment plants for each operation to match the various solution chemistries and throughputs, it says. “The two areas of cyanide recovery and metal detoxification are balanced to achieve the desired compliance levels,” GreenGold says. “Equally applicable to slurries and solutions, the process is technically and economically superior to all others currently available for the detoxification of gold plant tailings.” The company currently has four ReCYN options for clients, according to Commercial Director, Peter Mellor. ReCYN I is for active (free) cyanide reduction, while ReCYN II has been devised to include detox applications to recover cyanide complexes such as copper. ReCYN III adds gold recovery as a “secondary function” to the mix. The fourth option (ReCYN IV) includes gold recovery as a primary option, Mellor told IM, explaining that the development of a plant offering in this configuration could remove the need for a carbon-in-leach treatment plant in some applications. It is a ReCYN II installation the company is currently putting the finishing touches to at PT Agincourt Resources’ Martabe gold-silver operation in Sumatra, Indonesia. The application of the technology, which will detoxify tailings and recover cyanide and copper, was previously estimated by Whittle Consulting to provide a $126.9 million upside to the project. Speaking to IM earlier this year, Mellor said the company was just over a month away from completing the plant at Martabe before COVID-19 restrictions hit progress. He was confident the company would be back commissioning it before the end of the year. By far the biggest ReCYN installation of the technology, the ReCYN II plant at Martabe will fit into the 5.5 Mt/y circuit and treat around 1.2 t/d of copper, Mellor said. It will have benefits in terms of reduced cyanide consumption and reduced cyanide detoxification costs, he added. While work in Indonesia is currently on hold, the company is making significant progress elsewhere. Mellor said GreenGold had started detailed engineering for a plant in the Ivory Coast, while it had also completed an economic study on a legacy gold operation in Australia that showed compelling economics and the potential for a ReCYN IV installation for processing gold-bearing tailings. The company also has some 40 projects it is working on in the laboratory – from Australia to the US – with client awards expected this year. Sulphidisation, acidification, recycling and thickening (SART) technology also has applications in cyanide reducing projects, with GoGold Resources’ recently commissioned SART plant at the Parral tailings facility in Chihuahua, Mexico, a prime example. The plant is providing important economic and technical benefits to the Parral facility, according to the Toronto-listed company. This includes the recovery of a high-grade saleable copper sulphide product, the re-generation of cyanide – the largest single operating cost at Parral – and an improvement in the leaching efficiency of the heap. The company announced back in June 2019 that it had retained BQE Water to design, construct and commission the SART plant at Parral. This contract followed on-site testing and preliminary assessment of SART integration into the metallurgical process at Parral that BQE completed earlier that year. Brad Langille, President and CEO of GoGold, said: “Our team at Parral has successfully adapted agglomerated heap leaching to old mined waste at Parral, and the SART is a further optimisation of this innovation.” The SART plant commissioning phase began in late January, and steady production was reached in early March, GoGold said. The plant is currently operating as intended, producing copper sulphide precipitate and re-generating cyanide. Its introduction reduced the need for purchased cyanide by more than 20%, or around C$200,000 ($140,378) in the month of March, according to the company, with the revenue attributed to the copper sulphide precipitate offsetting the costs of operation of the SART plant. In the March quarter, GoGold produced copper by-product from the SART plant equating to 9,509 oz of silverequivalent. More SART plants could be on the way, too. BQE said in its March quarter results that engineering design for the construction of two new plants to be integrated into the respective gold metallurgical processing facilities for Shandong Zhongkuang Group and Zhaojin Group in China had been carried out. The company has also submitted a SART plant engineering design for the feasibility study assessment of tailings re-processing using carbonin-pulp at an existing mine in Mexico, while preliminary technical assessment of integrating SART into an existing gold heap leach operation in Mexico has been conducted. IM 14 International Mining | JULY/AUGUST 2020