The Baia Mare tailings dam failure, 2000

The Baia Mare tailings dam failure, 2000

On 30th January 2000 at 22:00 hrs, a breach in the tailings dam of the Aurul S.A. Baia Mare Company, released some 100,000 m3 of cyanide-rich tailings waste into the river system near Baia Mare in north-west Romania (Maramures district). This spill released an estimated 50-100 tonnes of cyanide, as well as heavy metals, particularly copper, into the rivers Somes, Tisza and finally into the Danube before reaching the Black Sea. Aurul S.A. is a stock company, jointly owned by “Esmeralda Exploration Ltd.”, Australia, and the Romanian “Compania Nationala a Metalelor Pretiosasi si Neferoase”, established in 1992. The company processes

La funivia del Cermìs

The two Cermis disaster, 1976 – 1998

On 9th March 1976, one of the gondolas of the Cermis cableway collapsed and fell to the ground causing the death of 42 persons. The trial brought to light the fact that the workers in charge of the plant had switched off the safety system, which blocked the movement of the cableway whenever the hauling cable touched the carrying cable. Following strong swaying, the hauling cable overlapped the carrying cable and, since the safety system was switched off, the latter was truncated by the friction, causing the fall of the gondola. On 3rd February 1998, during a training flight, a

The Aznacóllar tailings dam failure, 1998

The Aznalcóllar pyrite mine tailings dam, which stored mining sludge and waste, is near Seville, in southern Spain. On 25th April 1998, its reinforcing wall collapsed releasing thousands of gallons of toxic chemicals and heavy metals into the surrounding countryside, including the River Guadiamar, which flows directly into the marshlands of Coto Doñana. As a consequence of the mine’s retention wall failure, 2 million m3 of highly toxic pyrite sludge and another 4 million m3 of acid water leaked into Spain’s treasured Doñana National Park, a major haven for migratory birds on their way between Africa and Europe. As an

The Merriespruit tailings dam failure, 1994

On 22nd February 1994, the partial collapse of a dam (similar to the dams which collapsed in Stava) where gold mining waste was stored, destroyed the suburb of Merriespruit, killing 17 people and causing wide-scale destruction. In July 1994, the Association of the relatives of the Victims of the Stava Valley disaster placed a plaque commemorating those who died in the Merriespruit disaster in the cemetery where many victims of the Stava disaster are buried. The plaque was unveiled by the Mayor of Longarone and by the Consul of South Africa as a gesture bonding different communities hit by the

The Val Martello disaster, 1987

In the second half of August 1987, heavy downpours affected the Venosta valley in South Tyrol (Italy), causing a rapid increase in the water level, well beyond safety limits, in the hydroelectric reservoir contained by the Gioveretto dam in the upper Martello valley, a lateral hollow of the Venosta valley. In the months prior to disaster, the managers in charge of the plant had filled up the reservoir in order to have the maximum water availability for the production of electric power during the autumn and winter. Even before intense precipitation, the reservoir’s level was approaching its maximum. In the

The Buffalo Creek mineral waste facility failure, 1972

The Buffalo Creek flood was an accident that occurred on 26th February 1972 when coal slurry impoundment dam 3 built on a hillside in Logan County, West Virginia (USA), by the Pittston Coal Company collapsed. In the days preceding February 26th, rain fell almost continuously, although experts later claimed this was typical for late winter weather in the area. Buffalo Mining officials, concerned about the condition of the highest dam, measured water levels every two hours the night of the 25th. Although a Pittston official in the area was alerted to the increasing danger, the residents of the hollow were

The Aberfan mineral waste facility failure, 1966

On Friday, 21st October 1966, at 9:15 a.m., colliery waste tip number 7 (containing waste rock from the local coal mine) slid down Merthyr Mountain in South Wales (Great Britain). As it collapsed, it destroyed twenty houses and a farm in the small village of Aberfan, before going on to demolish virtually all of Pantglas junior school and part of the separate adjacent senior school. The pupils had just left the assembly hall, after a music lesson, when a great noise was heard outside. Had they left for their classrooms a few minutes later, the loss of life would have

The Sgorigrad tailings dam failure, 1966

Sofia, Vratza and Sgorigrad. Around midday of 1st May 1966, a 450,000 cubic metre mudslide swept away the village of Sgorigrad in northern Bulgaria, killing hundreds of people and causing incalculable material and environmental destruction. This mudslide was generated by the collapse of the tailing containment dam where the waste muds from the flotation plant of the Mir-Placalnica mine were stored. The book 'Sgorigrad - Stava. Identical Disaster' Трагедията в село Згориград (България) Exploited since ancient times (early records go back to the times of the Thracians and Romans), in 1960 the Mir-Placalnica mine was equipped with a flotation plant

Miniera di rame in Cile

The El Cobre tailings dam failure, 1965

On 28th March 1965, at 12:35 p.m. two tailings dams serving a copper mine in El Cobre district (Chile) suddenly collapsed. (Picture: A copper mine impoundment in the Andes.) The small copper mining town of El Cobre in the path of the flow was annihilated with over 200 deaths occurring. This failure was triggered by a 7.5 Richter magnitude earthquake. The first impoundment (Antiguo) was commissioned in 1930, but after a new (Nuevo) dam was constructed in 1963, the Antiguo (old) dam was used only periodically as a standby. The dyke had been built by upstream hydraulic filling, and the

La diga del Vajont

The Vaiont disaster, 1963

At 22:39 hours of 9th October 1963, a vast landslide involving some 270 million cubic metres of rock and debris was set in motion from the slope of Mt. Toc and collapsed into the artificial reservoir of Vaiont (in Friuli Venezia Giulia, northern Italy). The impact on the water surface generated a big wave which in a few seconds wiped out a large area on the opposite slope and downstream of the dam, destroying most of the village of Longarone (in Venetia) and parts of other villages in the River Piave valley. 1910 persons were killed in what to date