Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining

There is growing urgency for CO2 removal strategies to slow the increase of, and potentially lower, atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Enhanced weathering, whereby the natural reactions between CO2 and silicate minerals that produce dissolved bicarbonate ions are accelerated, has the potential to remov...

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Main Authors: Bullock, LA, James, RH, Matter, J, Renforth, P, Teagle, DA
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media 2021
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author Bullock, LA
James, RH
Matter, J
Renforth, P
Teagle, DA
author_facet Bullock, LA
James, RH
Matter, J
Renforth, P
Teagle, DA
author_sort Bullock, LA
collection OXFORD
description There is growing urgency for CO2 removal strategies to slow the increase of, and potentially lower, atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Enhanced weathering, whereby the natural reactions between CO2 and silicate minerals that produce dissolved bicarbonate ions are accelerated, has the potential to remove substantial CO2 on decadal to centennial timescales. The global mining industry produces huge volumes of fine wastes that could be utilised as feedstock for enhanced weathering. We have compiled a global database of the enhanced weathering potential of mined metal and diamond commodity tailings from silicate-hosted deposits. Our data indicate that all deposit types, notably mafic and ultramafic rock-hosted operations and high tonnage Cu-hosting deposits, have the potential to capture ~1.1–4.5 Gt CO2 annually, between 31 and 125% of the industry's primary emissions. However, current knowledge suggests that dissolution rates of many minerals are relatively slow, such that only a fraction (~3–21%) of this potential may be realised on timescales of <50 years. Field trials in mine settings are urgently needed and, if this prediction is confirmed, then methodologies for accelerating weathering reactions will need to be developed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a523da37-efdc-48b6-b60f-7b1e7fe9bab72022-03-27T02:38:26ZGlobal carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond miningJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a523da37-efdc-48b6-b60f-7b1e7fe9bab7EnglishSymplectic ElementsFrontiers Media2021Bullock, LAJames, RHMatter, JRenforth, PTeagle, DAThere is growing urgency for CO2 removal strategies to slow the increase of, and potentially lower, atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Enhanced weathering, whereby the natural reactions between CO2 and silicate minerals that produce dissolved bicarbonate ions are accelerated, has the potential to remove substantial CO2 on decadal to centennial timescales. The global mining industry produces huge volumes of fine wastes that could be utilised as feedstock for enhanced weathering. We have compiled a global database of the enhanced weathering potential of mined metal and diamond commodity tailings from silicate-hosted deposits. Our data indicate that all deposit types, notably mafic and ultramafic rock-hosted operations and high tonnage Cu-hosting deposits, have the potential to capture ~1.1–4.5 Gt CO2 annually, between 31 and 125% of the industry's primary emissions. However, current knowledge suggests that dissolution rates of many minerals are relatively slow, such that only a fraction (~3–21%) of this potential may be realised on timescales of <50 years. Field trials in mine settings are urgently needed and, if this prediction is confirmed, then methodologies for accelerating weathering reactions will need to be developed.
spellingShingle Bullock, LA
James, RH
Matter, J
Renforth, P
Teagle, DA
Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title_full Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title_fullStr Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title_full_unstemmed Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title_short Global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
title_sort global carbon dioxide removal potential of waste materials from metal and diamond mining
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AT jamesrh globalcarbondioxideremovalpotentialofwastematerialsfrommetalanddiamondmining
AT matterj globalcarbondioxideremovalpotentialofwastematerialsfrommetalanddiamondmining
AT renforthp globalcarbondioxideremovalpotentialofwastematerialsfrommetalanddiamondmining
AT teagleda globalcarbondioxideremovalpotentialofwastematerialsfrommetalanddiamondmining