BHP’s New Water Treatment Plant at Minera Escondida Makes Mining History
The Challenge
From cooling and dust suppression to beneficiation (the treatment of raw material to improve physical or chemical properties especially in preparation for smelting) and concentration, sustainable water use is essential to copper miners as market demands grow while ore bodies decline at projects across the industry. Water impacts, real or imagined, can generate conflicts with communities and environmental groups. Disputes may escalate into civil unrest and lead to harsh regulations and incalculable financial losses. Current flashpoints span mining jurisdictions worldwide.
Smart water use is also a pillar of the United Nations-led Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and core to the strategy of the Copper Alliance® and its members, including BHP that aims to eliminate all freshwater use in Chile by 2030. Amid some of the planet’s highest altitudes and driest geographies—and most prolific red metal mines—this is no small feat.
The Journey
Last month, BHP took a giant leap forward with the inauguration of the Minera Escondida mine’s second seawater desalinization plant (EWS), making history in the process. The installation, with its 2,500 l/s processing capacity, is the largest such facility in the Southern Hemisphere.
The new installation, complementing Escondida’s existing 525-l/s plant that has been running since 2006, is the legacy of a pioneering journey. Construction began in 2013 and represents the culmination of an investment of $3.4 billion, 45 million employee hours and untold ingenuity. Additionally, it represents a major milestone as the world’s top miner seeks to reduce aquifer dependence across its operations.
The Logistics
High in the Andes mountains, the logistical prowess behind the EWS is as extreme as the desert surrounding it, which is one of the planet’s highest locations—barely receiving a millimeter of rainfall in any given year.
Since the desalination plant lies at sea level, crews constructed four high-pressure
pumping stations and two one meter (42 inch) pipelines to transport the process water from Puerto Coloso to Minera Escondida’s installations 180 km (112 miles) away, and 3,200 meters (10,499 feet) above sea level. With nine high-pressure pumps, each station comprises a 4,000 m3 transfer tank. A reservoir with a 500,000 m3 capacity also was built at the mine, guaranteeing an uninterrupted supply of water.
The Technology
The EWS brings innovation to all three phases of the project cycle. First, seawater is withdrawn by a system deploying two tunnels, boasting a full capacity of 8,000 l/s. Three self-cleaning screens effectively remove any specific impurity exceeding 3 mm.
“This plant reflects our deeply held belief that it is possible to practice sustainable mining, which is both an ethical imperative and a fundamental condition for the business.”
– Daniel Malchuk, President of BHP Minerals Americas
Next, seawater is pumped for a fine-cleaning procedure. This pre-treatment system ensures the quality needed for reverse osmosis (RO) membranes through 120 high-pressure, dual-layer filters containing sand and anthracite to capture smaller impurities. Sulphuric acid then is added to regulate pH, along with ferric chloride for coagulation and a dispersant.
Lastly, by the RO stage, the seawater is fully treated to flow through a semi-permeable membrane that, in turn, permits the further passage of the water, trapping salts. This phase enables the plant to reject the RO-processed water, return it to the ocean and yield its final product, known as permeate water.
The simultaneous operation of three concentrators—unprecedented in modern mining—is facilitated by high-voltage electricity transmission lines and transformer yards, powered by the Kelar gas-fired plant. Originally approved by Chilean environmental officials as a coal-fired facility, BHP instead opted for a clean electricity approach, transforming the unit into a combined-cycle natural gas complex.
With the EWS, BHP is driving a steadily growing trend in the world’s greatest copper-producing nation. Cochilco, the state copper commission that welcomed the project, predicts desalination will provide half the water demand of Chile’s copper miners by 2026.
In the 2017 Global Water Awards ceremony by Global Water Intelligence, the EWS was named “Industrial Desalination Plant of the Year.”
About the Copper Alliance®
The Copper Alliance® is a network of regional copper centers and their industry-leading members. It is responsible for guiding policy and strategy and for funding international initiatives and promotional activities. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the organization has offices in four primary regions: Europe and Africa, Asia, Latin America and North America. Copper Alliance® programs and initiatives are executed in more than 60 countries through its regional offices and country-level copper promotion centers.
About BHP
Operated by BHP with 57.5 percent ownership, Minera Escondida is one of the world’s biggest copper mines and co-owned by Rio Tinto (30%), JECO Corp. (10%) and JECO 2 Ltd. (2.5%); BHP, formerly BHP Billiton, is the world’s largest diversified miner headquartered in Melbourne, Australia.