|
Landscaping of Coal Wash Emplacements
Coalwash - the dirt and shale that is washed out of coal as part of the steelmaking process - has been transformed into a green landscape outside of Wollongong.
Coalwash from the Port Kembla Steelworks was taken to a site near the village of Wongawilli, where it was carefully contoured, top soiled, sown with grass and planted with trees.
This work was overseen by a consultative group comprising representatives from Wollongong City Council, the Environmental Protection Authority, the Department of Land and Water Conservation and ourselves.
Back to top
Replacing a Wetland at Ohio
Together with our partner North Star Steel, we have created a unique replacement wetland at the site of our mini-mill in Delta, Ohio, in the USA.
As part of the initial development approval in 1995, the partners were required to replace two hectares of wet forest land that would form part of the developed site with three hectares of similar wet forest land in another area.
Recognising a broader responsibility, we decided to replace the two acres with eight acres rather than three. The principal objective was to produce a forested wetland that would recreate the original habitat and support wildlife and recreational uses.
The site chosen for the new wetland was a fallow agricultural field. The topsoil was removed and stockpiled (to be returned as the final surface layer). The bottom was graded to create an impermeable basin, a series of deeper depressions dug with interconnecting channels to form ponds, and a low head dam created to regulate high water levels. The stockpiled surface soils were then replaced.
Several loads of topsoil excavated from the original wetland were also spread on the surface to "seed" the new wetland with plants from the natural wetland. Additional native wetland species were planted.
An ongoing monitoring program has been in place to ensure the wetlands are serving their functions - one of which is to educate the community and local schools. Trails and plaques have been placed in the wetlands to inform visitors of wetland functions and values, and a partnership established with the local school system to use the wetland as an outdoor classroom.
Back to top
|