Rio Tinto Kennecott & BYU partner on reclamation project
Rio Tinto Kennecott and Brigham Young Univerity (BYU) researchers are joining forces to develop innovative and sustainable solutions to improve reclamation at the Bingham Canyon Mine in Salt Lake Valley near Utah in the United States.
Rio Tinto reclamation project at Kennecott increasing biodiversity
In June 2020, a group of students and professors from the BYU Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences and the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry broke ground on fourresearch projects on land areas surrounding the mine with the goal to increase plant diversity, stability and enhance the aesthetics of areas visible from the Salt Lake Valley.
BYU Associate Professor of Plant and Wildlife Sciences Matt Madsen commented: “This partnership is helping Rio Tinto Kennecott to continue improving the quality of its reclamation efforts and give our students the opportunity to learn skills that will benefit them in their future employment. The restoration we are doing in these areas can benefit Utah’s land and community by bringing back native vegetation, improving the site for wildlife habitat, air quality and the viewshed here in Utah.”
Commitment to the environment
Rio Tinto Kennecott Managing Director Gaby Poirier said: “We are proud of our commitment to the environment, and this partnership is an important step in advancing sustainable outcomes. Joining forces with BYU professors and students to apply the latest environmental research to further improve our effort is extremely rewarding.
“This joint project is mutually beneficial for Rio Tinto Kennecott, BYU and our surrounding communities, and we hope this project will be a stepping-stone for future collaboration that helps improve reclamation work at other locations in Salt Lake City and more widely.”
Rio Tinto partnering with Brigham Young University
The partnership is employing 12 students from Brigham Young University on sixdifferent projects for the next three years, all of which contribute to land reclamation efforts. Study objectives include engineering seed coatings to increase seeding success, understanding the vital role of Curlleaf Mountain Mahogany, more effectively establishing perennial grasses and another to improve the viewshed of waste rock areas.
Alex Larson is one of two female BYU graduate students leading projects. Her Saints Rest Biodiversity Study is working to increase the diversity of plants on reclamation land by introducing shrubs and forbs that match the surrounding landscape, using a technique inspired by the process of how anti-epileptic medications work.
“When anti-epileptic medications are taken, the compounds that treat the symptoms are embedded in a biodegradable polymer, essentially a biodegradable plastic, which dissolves after ingestion, so it slows the release of the medication and increases its effectiveness,” said Larson.
“We are applying this same method to seeds. We have a biodegradable biocompatible polymer coating embedded with a growth hormone wrapping the seeds we are planting. This coating will help increase the germination success on the site compared to what would exist naturally.”
Fellow graduate student Holley Lund is spearheading the Yosemite Waterboxx Study nearby. Her team is working to grow woody species that match the surrounding hillsides. Waterboxx irrigation technology maintains moisture in the soil during dry periods of the year so that seedlings can establish in the rocky soils. By the end of the project, they will have planted 656 shrubs and trees.
“Restoration has been done on this site before,” said Lund. “It looks great during parts of the year; however, these particular species go dormant, turn brown and stand out from the native hillsides during other seasons.
“Our goal is to establish a woody species that will match the green textures of the surrounding mountainside, help with erosion and provide food for wildlife.”