Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Copper price resumes losses as Iran war continues to batter metals
    • Canada loaning millions to proposed Nunavik rare earth mining project linked to Trump White House
    • Underground mining safety: why accidents persist and what technologies help
    • Argentina’s mineral-rich glaciers on menu as Milei seeks to melt protections
    • As Zambia Pushes New Mining, a Legacy of Pollution Looms
    • American Rare Earths Commissions Oxide to Metal Study for Heavy Rare Earths
    • Fuerte Metals Begins 40,000 m Drilling Program at the Coffee Gold Project
    • China’s electrostate powers its grip on global metals
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Critical Materials»In Hunt for Rare Earths, Companies Are Scouring Mining Waste

    In Hunt for Rare Earths, Companies Are Scouring Mining Waste

    Critical Materials 7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Over many decades, coal mining in West Virginia has exposed sulfur-bearing rocks to oxygen, creating a widespread problem that continues to plague the region: the draining of highly acidic water into streams and creeks, which are then rendered lifeless.

    But a relatively new process developed by researchers at West Virginia University and Virginia Tech is providing hope for some waters plagued by acid mine drainage. The method, which captures the rare earths liberated by the fugitive sulfuric acid, not only cleans the streams. It also generates revenue to pay for the cleanup and provides a sustainable source of the critical metals needed to manufacture electric vehicles, wind turbines, and other technologies propelling the global transition from fossil fuels.

    Three pilot facilities in West Virginia are each currently producing four to five tons of rare earth oxides a year. A larger facility is under construction at the enormous Berkeley Pit, a shuttered open-pit copper mine in Butte, Montana, where a company aims to produce 40 tons of rare earths a year from the pit’s billions of gallons of toxic wastewater. Combined with the output of other planned re-mining operations, such efforts, experts say, could obviate the need for new mines.

    Experts say a significant portion of the nation’s strategic minerals could come from processing the tailings and other waste left behind in the 19th and 20th centuries, when metals processing was much more primitive and environmental standards were lax or nonexistent.

    A recent study by the Colorado School of Mines found that recovering 90 percent of existing byproducts could supply almost the entirety of U.S. critical mineral needs. “Policies and technological advancements can enable byproduct recovery, which is a resource-efficient approach to critical mineral supply that reduces waste, impact, and geopolitical risk,” the authors wrote.

    “The material is already pre-ground, and that saves a lot of water and energy,” said Ann Maest, an aqueous geochemist with a Colorado consulting firm and the author of a recent peer-reviewed study of re-mining funded by Earthjustice. “In that sense, I’m a cheerleader for re-mining. If it’s done well and you monitor the water quality and soil quality before and after you mine and you can show you made an improvement, that’s great.”

    But for all its promise, re-mining also has the potential to create new problems as companies remove and stir up tailings and other waste that have been dormant for decades, or longer. “Re-mining is mining, and current laws do not go far enough to stop dangerous mining practices,” said Aaron Mintzes, senior policy counsel for Earthworks, an environmental NGO that published a 2024 report on the reprocessing of mining waste. “We need updated mining laws and mining rules. The statute that governs public lands mining is from 1872.”

    As critics have noted, the possible environmental impacts of re-mining have not been well studied and are not well understood. Maest warned that the re-mining’s biggest threat arises when operators handle tailings that have been stored underwater to prevent their exposure to oxygen. Dewatering tailings ponds for metals reclamation can trigger dam collapses, like that which occurred in January 2000 during a re-mining operation in Baia Mare, Romania. The release contaminated the drinking water of more than 2 million people.

    The risk of such problems could be exacerbated by the Trump administration’s energy agenda, which would speed up approvals for mining activity. Combined with Trump’s national energy emergency declaration, the president’s executive order — called “Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production” — will hasten the processing of mining waste by reducing the timeline for environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act from years to weeks by bypassing public comment periods and draft environmental impact statements.

    The order reduces the time for consideration of potential impacts to endangered species from 135 to 7 days, and it allows agencies to skip tribal consultation on projects. Many legacy mining sites are on or near Native American reservations or on territorial lands.

    Last year the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) provided $135 million in funding to companies “demonstrating the commercial viability of methods for domestically refining and recovering REEs from mine tailings, deleterious material, and waste streams.”

    Trump’s emergency declaration covers all critical minerals, but some see it as a way to usher in other projects as well. “They really want to push the critical minerals because they can get into the whole fast-tracking approach the government is pushing,” said Maest. “But if you look at the schedule, it’s really [about mining] gold.”

    Maest offers an example: Idaho’s Stibnite Gold Mine, which was established in 1899 and operated into the late 1990s. Stibnite is situated on the edge of the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness, where Perpetua Resources says it will process historic mining waste to produce gold, silver, and antimony — a critical mineral used to make ammunition and batteries. The company plans to clean up millions of tons of waste and safely store the tailings. But according to its plans, it will also mine about 3,200 acres of new ground, an area nearly twice as large as the original mine, and create 15 miles of new roads — on the edge of the wilderness area.

    The U.S. is not alone in hastening mineral and metals extraction. The European Union recently loosened environmental standards to speed up the permitting of new mines for rare earths and other strategic metals to free itself from dependence on China. Both Australia and Canada have also sped up the timeline for the permitting of new mines and waste reprocessing.

    Beyond the processing of acid mine drainage, other approaches to re-mining are rapidly expanding. In the U.S., the burning of coal at power plants has also produced vast amounts of waste, which is now being eyed for extraction of rare earths. The DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory began operation last year of a pilot plant just outside Gillette, Wyoming, to produce REEs from coal fly ash.

    Phoenix Tailings, a Boston-based company that produces small amounts of REEs from mining waste and fly ash at its plant in New Hampshire, is building a pilot plant in the Adirondacks to extract REEs from 3 million tons of tailings from an iron mine that operated during the 1940s.

    Remediation is a critical aspect of many of these projects. David Cam, the executive chairman of Vancouver-based Envirogold Global, which reprocesses the tailings of shuttered mines for gold, silver, and other critical minerals, claims to “recover 99 percent of the metal and reduce sulfides by better than 96 percent.” The company says it will build its first 500-ton facility in Arizona next year.

    Worldwide, there is no shortage of tailings to target. The Global Tailings Review estimates there are 8,500 active and inactive tailings facilities storing 217 billion cubic meters of material, many of which are leaching toxic substances into soil and water.

    The environmental problems with re-mining are, in many ways, the same as those with virgin mining, chief among them the lack of strong environmental laws and rigorous enforcement. “There is no country in the world with strong enough laws to prevent significant harm where mining happens,” said Aimee Boulanger, executive director of the Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance, which inspects mines to assure compliance with voluntary standards. Tesla is one of its clients.

    But sustainability in mining, and in re-mining, is a long way off. “We never use the term sustainable,” said Boulanger. “We’re not going to be sustainable until we build in the idea of the circular economy.”

    Under the principles of circularity, waste is considered a design flaw, one that can be remedied by designing durable goods for disassembly and the reuse of their constituent parts after they reach their end of life. In this scheme, copper, cobalt, rare earth elements, and other materials with a significant environmental footprint continually cycle, drastically reducing the need for virgin metals and minerals.

    Boulanger, who has been working on these issues for more than 20 years, believes this is an opportune time to force change in the industry. “There’s never been as much attention on mining as there is right now,” she said.

    By – https://e360.yale.edu/features/mining-waste-rare-earth-minerals

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    American Rare Earths Commissions Oxide to Metal Study for Heavy Rare Earths

    The promise of a critical metal revealed

    Antimony emerges from obscurity as a strategic metal

    Don't Miss

    Vatican launches project encouraging disinvestment from mining sector

    Global Policy 2 Mins Read

    March 20 (Reuters) – The Vatican on Friday launched an international project encouraging disinvestment from…

    Nigeria says it has pulled in $2.6 billion into mining as it seeks US backing to make Africa a global critical minerals hub

    As the U.S. invests in rare earths, a mine that was broke and underwater 10 years ago is now a game-changer

    Tantalite prices jump to over two-decade high on Congo supply fears

    Top Stories

    Copper price resumes losses as Iran war continues to batter metals

    One of Alaska’s flagship mines soon could draw energy from the sun

    North Atlantic Titanium Highlights Strategic Importance Of Reshoring Western Critical Mineral Supply Of Titanium Metal

    RANKED: Top 20 automakers by battery metals spending

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Zambia dismisses US health warning after toxic spill in copper mining area

    Don't Miss

    Gold and silver hit records in 2025. They aren’t the only metals having a massive year.

    Mining rush for critical minerals threatens Amazon land reform settlements

    New regulation gives Turkey’s president final say on mining permits, prompting legal, environmental concerns

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.