Quarry Southern Africa March 2018 | Page 36

ENVIRONMENT IN FOCUS Quarrying – temporary land-use with potential to yield profits Alan Cluett This forms part of a series of articles on environmental management that will run in this magazine, which are targeted at operational management as at CEOs, directors and shareholders of surface mining companies. 2 Quarries - a blight on the landscape? Traditionally communities at large see quarries as destroyers 1. 2. 1 In 2006 and 2015 , I presented papers to the industry on quarry rehabilitation and the opportunities that quarry- closure presents to the forward-thinking manager. In essence, the magnitude of these future opportunities depends on our thinking and planning right now – similar to planning for a good retirement. Both presentations examine the opportunities presented to quarry operators to reduce operating costs associated with rehabilitation during the life of a quarry, while also maximising opportunities upon a quarry’s closure. The three main areas of opportunity include: 1. Reducing the financial resources assigned to unproductive rehabilitation provisions; 2. Avoiding unnecessary costs upon closure because of a pre- determined end-use; and, 3. Enhancing opportunity costs associated with optimising the future end-use and working methodically towards it over the remaining life of a mine. Alan Cluett of the environment during their operational life. Then, upon closure, as unsightly and unsafe scars on the natural environment, often left for surrounding communities to manage at their expense. Sadly, in a number of instances, this has been the case. Quarries – temporary land-use We need to change our thinking about rehabilitation. We need to see rehabilitation not as a future event but rather as an ongoing practice that we actively manage. We need to see quarrying as a temporary land-use that Colleen Cluett provides current benefits and serves to create a landscape for the next (temporary) land- use. We need to be creative in our thinking; abreast of community needs now and collaborate with communities and planners about their possible needs in the future. As an example, consider your hometown. Can you remember what it was like when you were a child, compared with the houses, schools and parks that are there today? Can you remember changes that your parents or grandparents described to you? ‘The changing dynamics of quarry rehabilitation’ Institute of Quarrying / ASPASA Conference. ‘The changing paradigm of quarry rehabilitation’ IQ / ASPASA Regional Meeting on 30 October 2015. 34 _ QUARRY SA | MARCH/APRIL 2018 Each block in your hometown may have undergone a number of changes to provide for the needs of that generation, or in instances, for more than one generation. In essence, these uses can be seen as a temporary land-use – as is quarrying. What do we need to do to optimise the value of quarries? Firstly, we need a change in mindset – a paradigm shift. We need to see quarrying and quarrymen in a new perspective: