Pages

Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts

Euroclay2015, 5-10 July 2015, Edinburgh, UK

Euroclay 2015 - the quadrennial meeting of the European Clay Groups Association (ECGA) jointly with the annual meeting of The Clay Minerals Society (CMS) and in association with the International Natural Zeolite Association (INZA) and the Geological Society.

To be held at Edinburgh University, Appleton Tower, 5th-10th July 2015.
Organised by The Clay Minerals Group of the Mineralogical Society of Great Britain & Ireland and The Clay Minerals Society.
The scientific program of EUROCLAY 2015 will bring together, in an exciting, leading-edge programme, specialists from different disciplines related to clays and clay minerals. It will consist of technical sessions of both oral and poster presentations with a generous quota of invited speakers who are the leaders in their respective fields.  A pre-meeting workshop and mid-meeting field excursions and short course will be integral parts of the scientific program.
A key aim of this conference will be to integrate industrial and academic workers, with sessions which cover both areas arranged around three societal themes where clay research flourishes, namely Energy, Materials, and Environment and Health.
A visit to Edinburgh is one of life's 'must-do' items. As Scotland's capital city, it is the home of geology and is littered with places of interest for the delegate and accompanying person alike.

Workshop

Filling the gaps – from microscopic pore structures to transport properties in shales

The workshop will take place on Sunday 5th of July at the Appleton Tower conference venue.
Organised by Reiner Dohrmann, Chris Greenwell and Thorsten Schaefer under the auspices of the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) "Clay Club" in association with Euroclay2015, The Clay Minerals Society and The Geological Society.
Part of the Geological  Society’s Year of Mud events programme
The cost is £75, but please note that there is a cost-waiver for students (£0), available on a first-come, first-served basis. This is funded by the 'Clay Club' and the Geological Society.
A wide spectrum of argillaceous media are being considered in Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) member countries as potential host rocks for the final, safe disposal of radioactive waste, and/or as major constituent of repository systems in which wastes will be emplaced. In this context, the NEA established a Working Group on Argillaceous Media in 1990, informally known as the "Clay Club". The Clay Club examines various argillaceous rocks that are being considered for the underground disposal of radioactive waste, ranging from soft clays to indurated shales.
Additionally, the shale gas and oil community is interested in the characterization of sediments and black shales from the core- to nano-scale, focusing on clay/brine/organic interfaces and understanding how pore space evolves and effects the transport and production potential of the shale system.
Through characterizing fundamental properties such as nano-/micropore connectivity, all the way up to understanding transport and mechanical fracture properties of whole rock units, both communities are studying the geological materials with a shared set of tools, from quantum mechanics computer simulations, through advanced microscopy and diffraction methods, up to triaxial mechanical tests and large-scale transport models.
Very generally speaking, these clay rocks are composed of fine-grained minerals showing pore sizes from < 2nm (micropores) up to > 50nm (macropores). The water flow, solute and gas transport and mechanical properties are largely determined by this microstructure, the spatial arrangement of the minerals and the chemical pore water composition. Examples include anion accessible ("geochemical") porosity and macroscopic membrane effects (chemical osmosis, hyperfiltration), geomechanical properties and the characteristics of two-phase flow properties (relevant for gas transport). In shale oil/gas systems, the role of clay minerals in creating porosity and controlling organic matter distribution is of key interest, as well as larger scale phenomena such as how diagenesis affects the mechanical properties of the shale gas unit.  At the current level of knowledge, there is a strong need to improve the nanoscale description of the phenomena observed at a more macroscopic scale. However, based on the scale of individual clay-minerals and pore sizes, for most of the imaging techniques this resolution is a clear challenge.
The workshop, hosted by Euroclay 2015 in Edinburgh, is intended to give, inter alia, a discussion platform on:
  • The current state-of-the-art of different spectro- microscopic methods
  • New developments addressing the above mentioned knowledge gaps in clays.
  • The perception of the interplay between geometry and electrostatics of experimentalists and molecular / Monte Carlo modeling groups providing valuable information on a lattice (1 clay surface; Å) scale.
The full day pre-conference workshop on July 5th, 2015, will be structured as follows:
8:30 h Workshop Registration
9:00 h -10:30 h Pore structure and connectivity
Janos Urai (RWTH Aachen, Germany)
Chris Clarkson (Univ. of Calgary, Canada)
Andrew Aplin (Durham, UK)
10:30 h – 11:00 h Coffee break
11:00 h – 12:30 h Chemical Information under high spatial resolution
Carmen Höschen (TU München)
Toni Lanzirotti (Uni Chicago, CARS)
Fred Mosselmans (Diamond Lightsource)
12:30 h – 14:30 h Lunch & Poster session
14:30 h – 16:00 h Gas/Water and ion mobility in tight formations
Marc Fleury (IFP, France)
Edo Boek (Imperial College, London)
Daniel Grolimund (PSI-SLS)
16:00 h – 16:30 h Coffee/Tea break
16:30 h – 17:30 h Upscaling & implementation in model approaches
Benjamin Rotenberg (UPMC, PESCA, Paris)
Christophe Tournassat (BRGM)
17:30 h – 18:30h Rock Mechanics
Cino Viggiani (UJF Grenoble, France)
Manika Prasad – (Colorado School of Mines, USA)
18:30 h – 18:45h  Summary & Workshop closure (Poster award)
19:00 h - 21:00 h  “Icebreaker” EUROCLAY
The deadline for submission of papers and extended abstracts has been extended to 1 March 2015. Papers arising from the invited lectures and extended abstracts of the posters will be published as peer reviewed contributions in a CMS workshop lecture series volume which will be made available on an open-access basis at the time of the workshop. The extended abstracts will be edited by Reiner Dohrmann, and the Invited lectures by Thorsten Schäfer and Chris Greenwell. 
The conference will host a workshop follow-on session on Monday 6th July, "From microscopic pore structures to transport properties in shales', for those wishing to make oral presentations and to continue the discussions from the workshop.
Those wishing to submit a smaller (1 page) abstract should register for the follow-on session on Monday: 'From microscopic pore structures to transport properties in shales'. Posters from the workshop and from the follow-on session will both be on display during the day of the workshop and during the follow-on session.
If you have any specific questions about the workshop please contact Reiner Dohrmann




Department of Mining, Estonia - http://mi.ttu.ee/mining
Mining Research - http://mi.ttu.ee/research
Mining Horizon projects at Horizon 2020 - http://mi.ttu.ee/horizon2020


#Mäeinstituut #Mining #Research

COBALT Closing Conference, 23-24 March 2015, Brussels

"Sustainable raw materials management in Europe – Fostering stakeholder dialogue to deliver on the future"

Closing conference of the COBALT FP7 project

23 – 24 March 2015, Brussels, Belgium

Registration

To register to the event, please fill out the online registration.

Programme



Department of Mining, Estonia - http://mi.ttu.ee/mining
Mining Research - http://mi.ttu.ee/research
Mining Horizon projects at Horizon 2020 - http://mi.ttu.ee/horizon2020


#Mäeinstituut #Mining #Research

21st PERG Symposium, 17-18 February 2015, Canada

21st PERG Symposium

Tuesday, February-17-15 - Wednesday, February-18-15

University of Waterloo
Environment 3
200 University Avenue West
WaterlooOntario N2L 3G1
Canada

519-884-5400

Description

The ​21st ​annual ​PERG/GRET ​Symposium ​will ​be ​held ​on ​February ​18th ​at ​the ​University ​of ​Waterloo, ​Ontario ​in ​Environment ​3 ​Auditorium ​beginning ​at ​8:30am. ​

A ​student ​poster ​session, ​ice ​breaker ​and ​dinner ​will ​be ​held ​the ​previous ​evening ​(Tuesday ​17th), ​late ​afternoon, ​at ​the ​University ​Club ​on ​the ​University ​campus.

Context ​of ​the ​21st ​PERG ​Symposium:

The ​Peatland ​Ecology ​Research ​Group ​(PERG) ​is ​pleased ​to ​invite ​you ​to ​it's ​21st ​Annual ​workshop, ​to ​be ​held ​in ​Waterloo, ​Ontario ​in ​February, ​2015. ​The ​vast ​majority ​of ​wetlands ​in ​Canada ​are ​peatlands, ​with ​Canada ​holding ​one-third ​of ​the ​peat ​resources ​of ​the ​world. ​Peat ​is ​an ​accumulated ​organic ​matter ​comprising ​dead ​and ​partly ​decomposed ​plant ​material ​that ​over ​time ​can ​form ​thick ​deposits ​in ​temperate ​and ​boreal ​peatlands. ​Peat ​is ​a ​valuable ​resource ​as ​a ​growing ​media ​and ​soil ​amendment, ​an ​eco-friendly ​absorbent, ​a ​biofilter ​for ​wastewater ​treatment ​and ​for ​therapeutic ​and ​pharmaceutical ​use. ​Peatlands ​also ​offer ​valuable ​ecological ​services; ​for ​example, ​they ​are ​the ​most ​efficient ​terrestrial ​ecosystem ​for ​long-term ​carbon ​storage. ​Their ​role ​in ​the ​global ​climate ​systems ​warrants ​a ​critical ​evaluation ​of ​their ​management. ​

The ​horticultural ​peat ​industry ​of ​Canada ​has ​invested ​23 ​years ​in ​R&D ​in ​habitat ​restoration. ​They ​continue ​to ​invest ​in ​research ​to ​achieve ​higher ​standards ​and ​better ​restoration ​practices ​for ​sustainable ​peatland ​management. ​2015 ​sees ​the ​inaugural ​year ​of ​a ​Sphagnum ​fibre ​farming ​experiment ​

The ​oil ​sands ​industry, ​which ​is ​strongly ​impacting ​the ​boreal ​wetlands ​of ​western ​Canada, ​recognizes ​the ​need ​to ​reduce ​its ​ecological ​footprint. ​Industry ​has ​responded ​by ​supporting ​experimental ​re-creation ​of ​peatlands ​on ​decommissioned ​open ​mine ​areas ​near ​Fort ​McMurray, ​Alberta, ​and ​sponsoring ​restoration ​attempts ​of ​former ​oil ​pads ​in ​the ​Peace ​River ​region. ​Both ​Syncrude ​and ​Suncor ​have ​now ​completed ​construction ​of ​their ​fen ​recreation ​projects, ​Sandhill ​and ​Nikanotee, ​respectively. ​

Mineral ​resource ​extraction ​in ​the ​boreal ​plain ​of ​Canada ​has ​opened ​up ​vast ​swathes ​of ​peatlands ​to ​varying ​stressors. ​Open ​pit ​mine ​dewatering ​in ​the ​Hudson/James ​Bay ​Lowland ​of ​northern ​Ontario ​causes ​depressurization ​of ​the ​limestone ​aquifer ​that ​underlies ​the ​predominantly ​peatland-covered ​landscape, ​resulting ​in ​partial ​desiccation ​of ​the ​surrounding ​area. ​

The ​restoration ​and ​reclamation ​of ​extensive ​disturbance ​in ​peatland ​landscapes ​command ​innovative ​solutions ​for ​which ​PERG ​is ​at ​the ​fore-front ​of ​researching ​solutions ​to ​these ​problems. ​





University of Waterloo - Conference Centre
200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1
Tel: 519-884-5400    Email: slkeppler@uwaterloo.ca
http://uwaterloo.ca/conference-centre/

SOMP 2015 | TU Bergakademie Freiberg

SOMP 2015 | TU Bergakademie Freiberg:


SOMP 2015

Society of Mining Professors - Societät der Bergbaukunde

26th Annual General Meeting & Conference

The 9th International Industrial Minerals Symposium (INDMIN-2015)

The 9th International Industrial Minerals Symposium (INDMIN-2015), organized jointly by TMMOB
Chamber of Mining Engineers of Turkey (Izmir Branch) and Department of Mining Engineering of Dokuz Eylül University Faculty of Engineering will be held in Izmir together with MINEX 2015 Fair on May 2015. Please do not forget to submit your full paper!

Authors who would like to attend the Symposium with a paper should submit a full paper "Registration and Submission Form" at the Symposium website. For complete formatting instructions and guidelines, please refer to the Full Text Template from the Symposium web site (http://indmin.org/en/registration-form/)

Papers submitted for publication will be fully refereed and the authors will be notified about the acceptance of their papers before February 15, 2015. The accepted papers will be presented by their authors in oral or poster presentation sessions according to the referee reports and be published in the symposium proceedings.

For further information please visit the website: http://indmin.org/en/

Important dates:
Notification of Acceptance of Full Paper: February 15, 2015

Symposium Topics:
The main presentation titles planned in the symposium are given below. Other topics can be also accepted with the consent of the symposium scientific board.
Legal issues on mining of raw materials
Planning and production techniques on mining of industrial raw materials
Construction raw materials and their technologies (aggregate, cement, natural stones, brick-tile etc.)
Glass and ceramics raw materials
Paper, plastics and paint raw materials
Chemicals and cosmetics industries raw materials
Recycling technologies and applications
Boron and boron production technologies
Refractory industry raw materials
Focus on new innovations/equipment for mineral processing
Production planning models and processing plant simulation
Environmental impacts of production operations and their evaluation
Occupational diseases and occupational health and safety
Global challenges and opportunities in industrial minerals sector
Marketing strategies and financial evaluations in industrial minerals sector


Prof. Dr. İlknur CÖCEN
Symposium Chair

Contact:

SDIMI 2015

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE | SDIMI 2015:

Since 2003 the SDIMI conference series has brought engineers, government officials, researchers, technical experts and non-governmental organizations together creating a community of mineral professionals who evaluate the challenges of creating and implementing sustainable practices in the mineral extraction industry.
The 7th SDIMI conference is being held at the University of British Colombia in Vancouver, British Colombia in July 2015. In keeping with the “Milos Declaration” this year’s conference will focus on integrating economics, community, environment and governance.
The objective of SDIMI2015 is to utilize the scientific, technical, educational and research potential of the mineral extraction community to contribute to a sustainable future.

FTTH CONFERENCE WARSAW ‘’GOVERNMENTAL DAY’’ WORKSHOP, 10 FEBRUARY 2015

10 FEBRUARY 2015 – FTTH CONFERENCE WARSAW
‘’GOVERNMENTAL DAY’’ WORKSHOP

Within the frame of this year’s FTTH conference being held in Warsaw, Poland (10th - 12th February 2015), atene KOM and the FTTH Council will organise a workshop on February 10th, entitled ‘’Governmental Day’’.
The workshop consists of keynotes from the European Commission and responsible authorities within the EU member States, subsequent discussions in the context of current broadband and ICT oriented issues and successful experiences in Europe. The workshop targets the following topics:

a.       DG-CONNECT Policy Agenda for broadband funding
b.      New “Broadband Europe” Portal
c.       Digital Agenda for Europe (DAE): The hard road to FTTH
d.      Cost reduction: Measures for rolling out more broadband in Europe
e.      Broadband strategies and best practices in the member states
f.        Regional workshops oriented on BSR and NSR

The overall objective of the workshop is to develop an interactive broadband and ICT platform for the participants to be informed, exchange knowledge and intensify interaction in the field of broadband funding, cost reduction, and Digital Agenda for Europe (DAE).

Program Agenda:
Please find the final workshop program here.

Get Together Dinner :
Prior to the workshop, there will be a get together dinner on February 9th. We would be glad if you took the opportunity to meet other speakers and stakeholders in an open round. Please find more information here.

 Registration Fee:
·         Policy makers and public officers register for free
·         Industry analysts are offered a special rate
·         Academia and students register at 100 €+ 3 € green donation + VAT
·         Furthermore, as the partner of FTTH Council we are pleased to offer a discount on registration fee for all the other participants (390 € + 3 € green donation + VAT; instead of 490 € + 3 € green donation + VAT).

Please register for the Workshop and dinner at: http://www.atenekom.eu/en/events/ftth-conference-2015/

We look forward to welcome you to our workshop.


For registration and any further questions or assistance, please feel free to contact Mr Peyman Khodabakhsh at p.khodabakhsh@atenekom.eu or Ms Magdalena Jähler at m.jaehler@atenekom.eu.



Department of Mining, Estonia - http://mi.ttu.ee/mining
Mining Research - http://mi.ttu.ee/research
Mining Horizon projects at Horizon 2020 - http://mi.ttu.ee/horizon2020


#Mäeinstituut #Mining #Research

Aerodays on 20-23 October 2015 in London, UK

Aerodays is the European Commission flagship event in Aviation research and innovation taking place once during each EU Research Framework Programme. The goal is to share achievements of collaborative research and innovation in Aeronautics and Air Transport within Europe and in world-wide international co-operation. For this edition - in the course of Horizon 2020 the EU Framework Programme 2014-2020 - five key themes based on Europe’s Vision for Aviation ‘Flightpath 2050‘ and subsequent work of ACARE: efficient and seamless mobility; Competitiveness of Industry; Greening of Aviation; Safety & Security; Skills for Breakthroughs. The programme will consist in plenary and parallel sessions and some additional social events. The last day, October 23 will be dedicated to optional technical visits. The event is co-organised by the European Commission, the British Department for Business, Innovation & Skills and ADS Group Limited.

Aerodays, the 7th European Aeronautics Days, is the European flagship event in aviation research and innovation which takes place once, during each EU Research Framework Programme.
Aerodays 2015 will take place in Central London, UK from 20-23 October 2015
Designed to present strategic perspectives for aviation, including research and innovation, the goal is to share achievements of collaborative research and innovation in aeronautics and air transport within Europe and world-wide international co-operation.

Mine Water Solutions in Extreme Environments, April 12-15, 2015 | Vancouver, Canada

ABOUT THE CONFERENCE

Mine Water Solutions in Extreme Environments is the second in an innovative new conference series that aims to examine a wide range of issues associated with mine water management in extremely wet, dry, and cold climates and with extreme hydrogeological and geochemical issues. The conference will provide a forum for presentation and discussion about successful practices that enable responsible mining to be undertaken in challenging environments while minimizing water use and/or preserving water resources. All aspects of mine water management, including hydrology, hydrogeology, diversion, containment, water conservation, minimization of water-quality impacts, seepage interception and treatment may be addressed. Management of water associated with mine dewatering, waste rock and tailings are of particular interest.

SCOPE OF CONFERENCE

The program will include sessions by practitioners and recognized experts on the themes below. Preference will be given tocase histories and solutions that emphasize leading management practices. The conference will include exhibits and short courses.

THEMES

CLIMATE

  • Water Management in Extremely Wet Areas
    • Precipitation, prediction of flood conditions
    • Diversion design, erosion management & water control during extreme events
    • Waste management & disposal challenges, control of impacted waters
    • Mine and tailing closure to protect surface water & groundwater
    • Water storage & treatment
    • Water balance modeling
    • Mine dewatering in wet environments
    • Laws and regulations

  • Water Management in Extremely Dry Areas
    • Water source efficiency / conservation & alternate water supply strategies
    • Tailings management to minimize water losses
    • Tailings closure to protect groundwater
    • Managing salts accumulation & dust
    • Dry processing alternatives
    • Water reuse and recycling
    • Optimizing water use vs. energy use
    • Optimizing water use vs. geotechnical stability

  • Water Management in Extremely Cold Areas (Glacial, Periglacial and Permafrost)
    • Seasonal effects on water management
    • Permafrost characterization, hydrology and water yields
    • Cold regions mine site hydrology & hydraulic issues
    • Geochemistry issues in cold regions
    • Climate change design criteria & permafrost impacts
    • Dam design, operating practices & mine closure in cold environments
    • Mining close to glaciers
    • Mine dewatering in permafrost areas
    • Legal & environmental aspects

  • Water Management and Climate Change
    • Issues associated with el Niño
    • Prediction tools, strengths, weaknesses, and regulatory requirements
    • Modeling climate change for operating and future mines
    • Climate change modeling on regional and project specific scales
    • Water management lessons learned from other industries
    • Contingency planning
    • Reaction kinetics as a result of climate change
    • Uncertainty and the use of historical data to forecast future trends
    • Addressing climate changes in EIAs permits and engineering design
    • Mitigation measures and monitoring

TEMPORAL CONDITIONS: MODELING AND ASSESSMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS DURING CONSTRUCTION, OPERATIONS AND CLOSURE

  • Challenging Geochemical Conditions Over Time
    • Investigation, testing & predicting water quality for water management
    • Geochemical control measures for underground and open pit mines, mine waste & tailings deposits
    • Contaminant transfer modeling

  • Surface Water Over Time
    • Long term modeling associated extreme dry and wet sequences
    • The geomorphic / surface water management nexus
    • “Zero discharge” through regeneration, reuse and recycling
    • Modeling of pit lake hydrology and water quality

  • Groundwater Over Time
    • Contaminant transport modeling in mine waste disposal areas
    • Long-term dewatering of orebodies (monitoring and prediction)
    • Modeling approaches in fractured and karstic rock environments
    • Managing zero discharge facilities
    • Steady state vs. transient modeling
    • Learning from diverse ground water models and approaches

  • Regulatory and Social Challenges
    • Contaminant transport modeling and the implications of moving to transient modeling
    • Capacity for reliable prediction vs. evolving regulatory regimes for EIA’s and permitting
    • Surface water, groundwater, geochemical regimes
    • Conceptual models, calibration targets, long-term transients
    • Role for judgment in prediction / forecasting / uncertainty / decision making
    • Site characterization and conceptual models as a back up to numerical models
    • Working with local communities and regulators on water supply and quality issues
    • Creative solutions for mine / community resource sharing

  • Hydrogeology in Deep Mining Environments
    • Maximising ground water data collection methods in deep, expensive drill holes
    • Monitoring methods for deep systems
    • Geochemistry issues related to sampling from depth (degasification, etc.)
    • Isotope analysis for source characterisation
    • Reservoir mechanics for deep waste fluid injection systems
    • Geophysical methods to enhance geological and hydrogeological characterisation
    • Coupled in-situ hydraulic and geomechanical characterisation
    • Coupled hydro/geomechanical modelling for deep open pit slope analysis
    • Crossover from nuclear repository and/or petroleum engineering studies to mining

WATER QUALITY

  • Physical Control of Contaminants
    • Contaminant immobilization
    • Diversions, barriers, interception and collection systems
    • Liner systems
    • Engineered measures to reduce seepage & piping of tailings materials
    • Immobilizing and treating salts

  • Water Treatment
    • Passive and active treatment approaches
    • In-situ treatment approaches
    • Evolving water quality standards & implications related to applicable water treatment technologies
    • Residual waste stream management
    • Water desalination
    • Treatment costs
    • Proven vs. emerging technologies
    • New business models for water treatment

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

Suggested attendees include engineers, corporate mining personnel who oversee long-term policy and planning, consultants, geoscientists, regulatory personnel, researchers and mine and mill managers involved with mine water supply, water recuperation, contaminated water migration control, tailings and tailings water management, hydro-geochemistry, and water treatment. The conference committee encourages a diversity of disciplines across all levels of the conference including authors, speakers, and conference participants. This will be an exciting opportunity to share ideas, learn about innovative approaches, make contacts, and discuss approaches to problems of mutual interest.

Conference 'Shale gas in a low-carbon Europe: the role of research', 23.02.2015, Brussels

HOW TO REGISTER
To access the online registration form, please follow this link:
We kindly ask you to register by 09 February 2015 at the latest.

OFFICIAL LANGUAGE
The official working language of the event will be English.
Outline of the Programme
08:30 - 09:30   Registration and coffee
09:30 - 10:15   Opening session: setting the scene
10:15 - 11:15   Session 1: Research and innovation to address the shale gas challenge
11:45 - 12:55   Session 2: An evidence- and science-based policy for shale gas exploitation
12:55 - 13:50   Open discussion: challenges for Europe and the role of research
13:50 - 14:00   Closing remarks
 

3rd International Conference on Heap Leach Solutions September 13-16, 2015 | Peppermill Resort Hotel Casino, Reno, Nevada, United States

Precious metal heap leaching had its origin in Nevada, and many technologies, including agglomeration of precious metal ores, were developed by scientists and engineers in Reno. There are many precious metal heap leach projects in Nevada and it also has one copper leach project. Nevada’s neighboring state of Arizona is a leader in copper heap leaching. The University of Nevada, Reno and the University of Arizona in Tucson have been active in heap leach research for a number of decades. Many professionals with extensive design, operating, and closure experience in precious and copper heap leaching live in the region,  making Reno the ideal location for this conference.

THEMES

  • Project development
    • Metallurgical and geotechnical testing of ores
    • Project alternatives development
    • Complex ore bodies, e.g. copper and gold
    • Design and evaluation of facilities (heap leach pads, ponds, SX-EW, carbon, and Merrill-Crowe)
  • Operations
    • Ore stacking
    • Leachate applications
    • Leachate collection and conveyance
    • Metal recovery
    • Operational optimization
    • Solution balance
  • Closure
    • Rinsing of heaps
    • Covers
    • Solution management
    • Long-term maintenance
  • Nickel, uranium and other metal leaching
    • Lixiviants
    • Design and operating experience
    • Material behavior under leach
  • Unsaturated flow
    • Material characterization
    • Modeling
    • Operational monitoring
  • New technologies
    • Processing
    • Liners
    • Solution treatment

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

This conference is relevant to everyone engaged in the development, design and construction of heap leach projects. Mining company personnel, academia, personnel from consulting and engineering companies, regulatory personnel and the financial institutions will find this conference of great interest. The range of technical expertise includes hydrometallurgy, process engineering, geotechnical and hydrogeological engineering, hydrologists, geochemists, biogeochemistry, water treatment, reclamation specialists, etc.

SHORT COURSES

The Organizing Committee invites interested parties to submit proposals for short courses to be held prior to the main conference. The short courses will take place on Sunday, September 13, 2015.
Proposals are due by March 1, 2015.
Please send your course proposal to heapleach@infomine.com.

COMMITTEES

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Co-ChairDirk van ZylUniversity of British Columbia and InfoMine, Canada
Conference ManagerOlga CherepanovaInfoMine, Canada
Conference CoordinatorSusana PerezInfoMine, Canada

PAST CONFERENCES

hpl13-logo           hpl14-logo