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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Philex: TSF3 will hold up to rains

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TUBA, Benguet—Philex Mining Corp. has assured Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu of the integrity of its Tailings Storage Facility No. 3 at the company’s Padcal mine here.

The firm also guaranteed the continuation of its programs on environmental protection upon the instruction of the Cabinet official, who came over Wednesday afternoon in a surprise visit.

“We can assure you, Mr. Secretary, that our tailings pond can handle the volume of rainwater more than what the worst typhoons had caused,” Eulalio Austin Jr., CEO and president of Philex Mining, said during a presentation at the Philex Guest House in this town’s Sitio Padcal in Barangay Camp 3. 

Austin also said the tailings pond could withstand earthquakes equivalent to the strongest that have hit the country.

Cimatu, who arrived with a 25-man entourage at Padcal, Philex’s gold-and-copper operations hosted by the Benguet towns of Tuba and Itogon, pressed Austin and other company officials on the ability and reliability of TSF3 and its accompanying structures to withstand flooding and earthquakes, bearing in mind the 2012 accident following two typhoons.

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Manuel Agcaoili, Philex Mining senior vice president and Padcal resident manager, said TSF3’s open spillway, which has replaced its underground drainage system since August 2013, was built with embankment-design parameters based on ANCOLD (Australian National Committee on Large Dams) and ICOLD (International Commission on Large Dams) guidelines.

Therefore, TSF3 can handle the amount of rainwater more than what Typhoons “Ondoy” in 2009, “Ferdie” and “Gener” in 2012 had caused, Agcaoili added. 

ANCOLD and ICOLD provide guidelines in the building of dams that are safe, economical, and environmentally and socially sustainable, he noted. These are vital to achieving excellence for all aspects of dam engineering, management, and related issues, the Philex official added.

While at TSF 3, in Itogon’s Sitio Balog, Barangay Ampucao—an hour’s drive from Padcal—Cimatu acknowledged the efforts that Philex Mining has been exerting to improve its facilities, particularly the ongoing improvement of the open spillway, through which nontoxic water passes from the tailings pond and onto Balog Creek, a tributary to the Agno River.

“You can continue what you are doing to protect the environment, ensuring no community will be affected in case a disaster strikes again,” he said.

Assuring the secretary of the company’s adherence to its obligations, Austin said Padcal and Philex Mining have been consistently implementing various programs on community development, nation-building, and environmental protection. 

He also stressed Philex Mining has been known as the “poster-boy” of responsible mining in the country.

On Aug. 1, 2012, Philex Mining suspended operations voluntarily as nontoxic tailing and water discharged from the TSF3 and onto the Balog Creek, following historically unprecedented rains brought about by “Ferdie” and “Gener,” which hit Benguet successively. 

It resumed production only starting from March 8, 2013 based on a four-month temporary lifting order issued by government and which was extended indefinitely afterwards. The formal resumption of operations started from Aug. 27, 2013.

The government allowed Philex Mining to resume operations after the company implemented urgent remediation measures, such as providing immediate assistance to the affected residents, cleaning up the Balog Creek, and ensuring the integrity of its TSF3 by building an open spillway.

It also paid P188.6 million as environmental obligation to the Pollution and Adjudication Board (PAB), in relation to Republic Act 9275, otherwise known as the Clean Water Act, on June 5, 2013, and P1.034 billion to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB), on Feb. 18, 2013, as fees over the accidental discharge of sediment.

Having three chutes, each measuring 12 meters wide and 300 meters long, the open spillway can channel up to 1,500 millimeters of rain over 24 hours, or more than thrice the 455 mm of rain that Ondoy dumped over a 24-hour period.

Government regulations say an open spillway must be able to withstand a flood event having an unusual rainfall with a 1-percent chance of occurring at any given time. With the TSF3 and its open spillway, this unusual rainfall would be equivalent to 1,000 mm in 24 hours. 

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