Calculating ecological footprints for mining companies-an introduction to the methodology and an assessment of the benefits

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Abstract

Ecological footprint analysis (EFA was first described in 1996 as a measure of carrying capacity appropriated by human activities. EFA is a resource and emissions accounting tool designed to track the demand on the biosphere's regenerative capacity. Ecological footprints are increasingly used as indicators of organizational and corporate environmental performance and product sustainability. There is a compelling argument to develop an EFA tool for mining companies. To determine the size of a mine's ecological footprint, land requirements for all categories of consumption and waste discharge must be summed. This land is only made up of the ecologically productive land and water in various classes (cropland, pasture, forests etc.) required on an ongoing basis to provide all energy and material resources consumed and absorb wastes. A challenge in conducting an EFA for a mine is the shortage of accessible data. Undertaking an EFA for a corporation or individual site entails compiling consumption and emissions data (which can be used for other reporting applications). The footprint results themselves highlight the most critical aspects of an organization's impact on the environment and provide a platform for focusing actions and for educating the workforce to improve their contribution to best-practice operations. This paper discusses the benefits and challenges of undertaking an EFA for a mining company, and provides examples of the various components of ecological footprints associated with mines, as well as showing how an EFA can be used to understand and communicate some of the impacts associated with mining activities.

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APA

Limpitlaw, D., Alsum, A., & Neale, D. (2017). Calculating ecological footprints for mining companies-an introduction to the methodology and an assessment of the benefits. In Journal of the Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy (Vol. 117, pp. 13–18). South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. https://doi.org/10.17159/2411-9717/2017/v117n1a3

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