Quarry Southern Africa July 2019 | Page 21

WINNING Some clays have a certain amount of carbon in, in which instance it has to be closely controlled. It is clearly visible in the stockpiles as segregated layers of white and black clay, as well as layers of grey in between. “For this reason we do selective mining, and even though we outsource the mining we have to keep close tabs on this aspect. Our mining partners typically pick up considerable expertise in our specific requirements over the years. We consequently tend to have a long relationship with a mining company. The clay is riddled with carbonaceous material which has three uses, explains Von Wielligh: as a source of clay itself, as a fuel source, and it adds to the aesthetics of the bricks through the spots it leaves on the brick after firing. “There has to be a fairly substantial amount of carbonaceous material in the product for this to occur.” Challenges All the benefication is done at the factory (just the other side of a fence) and is not included in mining activity. While the quarry is small compared to many and viewed as an adjunct to the factory, it still requires a Traffic Management Plan under mining regulations as it is a quarry. “Having three to four dump trucks is not a big risk, but we have demarcated roads as one-way routes to ensure vehicles never cross each other; while trucks bringing the imported material are made aware when mining activity is taking place.” Corobrik has its own water truck in addition to one operated by its mining contractor, and does regular dust monitoring at eight points managed by an outsourced health hygienist. This ensures dust is within prescribed limits: “We conform to suburban standards of less than 300mg a day rather than the industrial area level of 1 200mg/day.” The facility uses 1 500kℓ of water a month, mostly in the factory. Borehole water is increasingly being used to reduce the demand on municipal water. In addition, one of the quarry pits has filled with rainwater and been rehabilitated into a dam, which is also tapped as a water source. Rehabilitation A brick factory ideally should be located in a rural area. However, the result is that local neighbourhoods typically begin encroaching over the decades onto the quarry site. This is not always bad, notes Von Wielligh, as ultimately the land value overtakes the value of production, which would typically be terminated. “In this area there is a lack of waste landfill, and therefore the use that this site has been earmarked for is waste disposal.” In fact, as parts of the quarry are decommissioned the rehabilitation plan is applied to that section. For instance, a neighbouring tile factory has already been back-filling them with its waste, explains Von Wielligh. “There is a pre-requisite that the waste must be ‘green’ without plastic or anything toxic, or otherwise we would have to line the pit to orient leakage. Once the last two mining seasons are complete, we will commence a full rehabilitation process to accelerate this plan to fill up the quarry. The company has been in talks with other companies who need waste facilities in this regard. This is probably the closest potential landfill site for many companies in this area, particularly for building rubble. Distance is key in waste disposal,” he says.  The testing lab is used for factories all over the country. www.quarryonline.co.za  QUARRY SA | JULY/AUGUST 2019_19