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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Australia gives environmental approval to new uranium mine
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) April 2, 2013


Australia on Tuesday gave environmental approval for a new uranium mine in its resource-rich west, with 36 conditions to guard against negative impacts from radiation and other factors.

Environment Minister Tony Burke said he was giving the go-ahead for Toro Energy's Aus$269 million (US$281 million) Wiluna uranium project of two open pits and a processing plant, after a "rigorous environmental assessment".

"Expert agencies provided advice to ensure that the proposal meets world's best practice environmental standards for uranium mining, and that the risks to the environment, including risks from radiation and to groundwater and surface water, can be acceptably managed," he said.

The project will be the first uranium mine in Western Australia, a key exporter of iron ore and gas.

Burke said he had considered public comments made during the assessment for the mine, which will be 30 kilometres (20 miles) southeast of the goldfields town of Wiluna, some 733 kilometres east of the state capital Perth.

Australia does not use nuclear power but is the world's third-ranking uranium producer behind Kazakhstan and Canada. In 2010 it exported 6,888 tonnes of oxide concentrate worth more than Aus$600 million ($630 million).

Japan, the United States and European Union buy the majority of Canberra's exports of the nuclear fuel, with smaller shipments to South Korea, China, Canada and Taiwan.

Canberra's overturning of a uranium export ban to India in 2011 and subsequent talks about kick-starting the trade have boosted interest in the nuclear fuel. The Western Australian government approved Wiluna in 2012.

Burke said he was satisfied that the strict conditions would ensure the project could go ahead without unacceptable impacts on the environment both during mining operations and beyond the life of the mine.

"The 36 strict conditions I have put in place will guard against any negative impacts from radiation or to groundwater and surface water, and include precautions to ensure that once the mine is closed, the site is safe for humans and animals, and is non-polluting," he said.

"The measures that the company will use to achieve these requirements must all be detailed in an extensive and thorough environmental management plan which I must be satisfied with and approve before substantial works on the project can begin," he added.

Australia's new Minister for Resources and Energy, Gary Gray, said the proposed mine would be the most advanced in the world of the new generation of uranium mines and provide economic benefits locally and nationally.

"With a lifespan of 14 years, the mine is expected to process 1.3 million tonnes of ore annually and produce around 780 tonnes of uranium oxide concentrate," he said.

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