Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

World's Second-Largest Iron Miner Vale Bets $12 Billion On Revolutionary Technology


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Vale, the world's second-largest iron ore producer, announced a $12.2 billion overhaul of its Brazilian operations on September 4, 2024, abandoning the deadly dam storage methods that killed 289 people in two disasters.

The six-year plan represents mining's most dramatic safety transformation. The announcement came as Vale reopened its Capanema mine in Minas Gerais after 22 years.

The $945 million facility showcases "dry processing" technology that eliminates water use and produces zero waste requiring dam storage, departing completely from traditional methods storing toxic sludge behind earthen barriers.

Vale's transformation stems from two preventable disasters. In November 2015, the Fundão dam near Mariana collapsed, releasing 44.5 million cubic meters of mining waste that killed 19 people and contaminated 668 kilometers of the Doce River.

Four years later, another Vale dam failed at Brumadinho, killing 270 people including 254 mine workers. Internal documents revealed both collapses were preventable, with structural warnings ignored months before failures.



The human cost led to a $30.9 billion compensation agreement finalized in October 2024. CEO Gustavo Pimenta, who served as CFO during Brumadinho's aftermath, now leads the transformation.

The dry processing technology uses ore's natural moisture instead of adding water during separation, eliminating tailings entirely. Vale already operates 90% dry processing at northern operations, planning 100% conversion by 2027.

Vale is also implementing "circular mining" that reprocesses historical waste. The company produced 9 million tons of iron ore from reprocessed tailings in early 2024, projecting 10% of total production from recycled sources by 2030.

The investment reflects mining's true environmental costs. Vale's $37.5 billion in 2024 revenue and $5.7 billion net income support the modernization while compensating victims.

The Capanema operation employs autonomous trucks and a 27-kilometer conveyor system, creating over 6,000 construction jobs with local hiring priority. Global mining companies monitor Vale 's transformation closely.

Success could revolutionize an industry built on storing toxic waste behind increasingly dangerous dams. Failure would confirm mining's environmental costs remain unavoidable, leaving communities bearing extraction risks.

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