BHP (ASX, NYSE:BHP) has approved $44 million for the restart of operations at Samarco Mineração, its iron ore joint venture with Vale in Brazil, four years after a deadly dam collapse that killed 19 people and became the worst environmental disaster in the country’s history.
The world’s largest miner said the funding would go towards the construction of a filtration plant over the next 12 months, after which the mine will resume production.
The new facility will allow Samarco to use a “dry stacking”
technology to dispose of mining waste, replacing the previous tailings dam-based
system.
Last week, Samarco was granted the go ahead from the environmental regulator of the state of Minas Gerais. Vale said then it expected production at Samarco to resume in the second half of 2020, with a capacity of between 7 million to 8 million tonnes of iron ore pellets per year.
At the time of the 2015 disaster, it produced about 30 million
tonnes of iron ore pellets a year.
BHP and Vale each hold a 50% of Samarco, the mine operator,
which now has all environmental licenses to progress towards the restart.
In January this year Vale, the world’s largest iron ore producer, was involved in another major tailings dam failure.
The incident, near the town of Brumadinho, killed at least 250 people and triggered a criminal investigation, a global inquiry into the status of 726 tailing dams, as well as several claims that Vale knew about the fragile state of the structure but did nothing.