Abstract

The Lower Silesia area in SW Poland is characterized by a geological structure that is conducive to mining activity. The exploitation of rock raw materials plays an important role in this sector of the economy. By the end of 2017, there were in total approximately 400 current concessions for the exploitation of rock raw materials in the analysed area (Polish Geological Institute, MIDAS database—Management and Protection System of Polish Mineral Resources). The conducted mining activity results in waste, which in the greatest amount occurs in the process of obtaining crushed road and construction aggregates, natural aggregates, carbonate raw materials for the cement and lime industry, as well as stone elements for construction and road engineering. At the end of 2016, the mining plants accumulated 26,569,600 Mg of waste. As part of the European Regions Toward Circular Economy (CircE) project, research was conducted on the volume and composition of the mining waste of rock raw materials in the years 2010–2016 within Lower Silesia. This research used the methods of statistical, descriptive and spatial analysis to identify mining plants with the highest potential for using their wastes. In the course of this study, 6 mining plants with the highest potential of using their waste for industrial production purposes were selected. In order to objectively select these plants, the methodology of qualitative multi-criteria analysis was developed, and 7 criteria were selected for assessing the economic potential of using waste from the mining of rock raw materials. An additional result of this research is a database and graphical presentation of changes in the spatial distribution of generated waste in the Lower Silesia region in the years ranging from 2010 to 2016.

Highlights

  • According to the Polish legislation, the holder of waste is first obliged to subject such waste to a recovery process

  • The study focused on two aspects: (1) a quantitative-spatial and temporal analysis of the distribution of mining waste generated in rock mineral mines in the Lower Silesia region; and (2) a qualitative-analysis of the characteristics of mining waste generated in particular mine plants and an identification of rock mineral mining waste that, due to its quantity and composition, could be used for industrial production purposes with known or new technologies

  • The verified significance of the criteria adopted for the quantitative multi-criteria analysis is

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Summary

Introduction

According to the Polish legislation, the holder of waste is first obliged to subject such waste to a recovery process. If this is impossible or unjustified due to economic reasons, such waste may be subjected to disposal in the mining waste treatment facilities (MWTF). Research on the use of waste raw materials from the extraction and processing of rock raw materials is carried out in Poland and around the world [1,2,3,4,5]. The purpose of this study was to create an inventory of deposited mining and processing waste, as well as to analyse the possibilities of their management with the use of existing and/or new technologies. The research was conducted in two ways: quantitative and qualitative, which included the analysis of mining waste from the Minerals 2018, 8, 375; doi:10.3390/min8090375 www.mdpi.com/journal/minerals

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