Exxaro unveils R250m water treatment plant at Matla coal mine

9th April 2015 By: Natasha Odendaal - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

Exxaro unveils R250m water treatment plant at Matla coal mine

Photo by: Duane Daws

KRIEL, MPUMALANGA (miningweekly.com) – Diversified miner Exxaro on Thursday unveiled the first of three water treatment plants designed to mitigate underground water storage constraints, protect scarce natural water resources and ensure the safety of mineworkers.

The launch of the R250-million Robert Clarke Water Treatment Plant (WTP) at the underground Matla coal mine, near Kriel, in Mpumalanga, was the start of Exxaro’s holistic group-wide water management strategy, said Exxaro coal financial performance group manager Mellis Walker.

The WTP would treat 10 Mℓ/d of water pumped from the operation’s mined-out underground workings, with 2.5 Mℓ of the recycled water to be reused as potable water by the mine and the surrounding communities and the remaining 7.5 Mℓ discharged into the nearby Olifants river for downstream use.

The coal mining operations, which produced between 10-million and 11-million tons of coal a year and which provided 12% of coal used by State-owned power utility Eskom, currently experienced significant water ingress that heightened flooding risks, which threatened the safety of mineworkers and increased the potential risk of environmental contamination.

With a few underground dams and one above-ground dam servicing the Matla 1, 2 and 3 mines at capacity, the construction of a WTP had emerged as the most viable and sustainable option for disposing of excess water from its mining operations.

According to Matla business unit manager Danie Stapelberg, the mine would have likely faced a stoppage by mid-June, owing to water storage constraints.

At the start of 2014, Exxaro-appointed Prentec, which would manage the plant for the next two years, broke ground on the plant that would purify water and prevent the release of contaminated water into the environment.

The modular plant would be fully operational by the end of May, with the water pumping prioritised in the regions earmarked for mining in the next five years.

Walker explained that the construction and commissioning of the plant formed the first part of the group’s water conservation plans.

A pilot plant was currently in operation at Exxaro’s North Block Complex operation, near Belfast, and with a capital budget approved, a full-scale WTP would be implemented by the end of this year.

The group had also completed a prefeasibility study and started a bankable feasibility study at the Arnot mine, near Middelburg, where Exxaro aimed to establish another WTP by 2017.