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Toward sustainable reprocessing and valorization of sulfidic copper tailings: Scenarios and prospective LCA

There has been increasing attention recently to reprocessing of mining waste, which aims to recover potentially valuable materials such as metals and other byproducts from untapped resources. Mining waste valorization may offer environmental advantages over traditional make-waste-dispose approaches....

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Published in:The Science of the total environment 2023-05, Vol.871, p.162038-162038, Article 162038
Main Authors: Adrianto, Lugas Raka, Ciacci, Luca, Pfister, Stephan, Hellweg, Stefanie
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:There has been increasing attention recently to reprocessing of mining waste, which aims to recover potentially valuable materials such as metals and other byproducts from untapped resources. Mining waste valorization may offer environmental advantages over traditional make-waste-dispose approaches. However, a quantitative environmental assessment for large-scale reprocessing, accounting for future trends and a broad set of environmental indicators, is still lacking. This article assesses the life cycle impacts and resource recovery potential associated with alternative waste management through mine tailings reprocessing at a regional scale. Sulfidic copper tailings in the EU were selected as a case study. We perform prospective life cycle assessments of future reprocessing scenarios by considering emerging resource recovery technologies, market supply & demand forecasts, and energy system changes. We find that some reprocessing and valorization technologies in future scenarios may have reduction potentials for multiple impact indicators. However, results for indicators such as climate change and energy-related impacts suggest that specific scenarios perform sub-optimally due to energy/resource-intensive processes. The environmental performance of reprocessing of tailings is influenced by technology routes, secondary material market penetration, and choices of displaced products. The trade-off between climate change and energy related impacts, on the one hand, and toxicity impacts, on the other hand, requires critical appraisal by decision makers when promoting alternative tailings reprocessing. Implementing value recovery strategies for building material production, can save up to 3 Mt. CO2-eq in 2050 compared to business as usual, helping the copper sector mitigate climate impacts. Additional climate mitigation efforts in demand-side management are needed though to achieve the 1.5 °C climate target. This work provides a scientific basis for decision-making toward more sustainable reprocessing and valorization of sulfidic tailings. [Display omitted] •Environmental impacts of copper tailings reprocessing in the EU are quantified.•Future scenario narratives are leveraged to create prospective life cycle assessment models.•Copper tailings reprocessing can mitigate GHG emissions and toxicity impacts in 2050.•Tailings reprocessing can supply up to 2 % of future European copper demand.•Tradeoffs exist between climate change and ecotoxicity impacts for different
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162038