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BME reaffirms commitment to delivering sustainable mining solutions

By reliably employing used oil, a hazardous waste, as a key raw material in the manufacture of its standard bulk emulsions, Omnia Holdings company BME is striving to deliver sustainable, future-fit solutions through innovation and precision.

This is according to Sachin Govender, Used Oil Manager at BME, who highlighted how the company is incorporating used oil in its world class emulsion explosives.

“Through our scientifically rigorous processes, we convert a waste product into a sustainable energy source that can break ground to meet the demands of mining while also promoting environmental sustainability and socio-economic development,” said Govender. “Used oil is a major environmental risk. Just one litre can contaminate about a million litres of South Africa’s scarce water resources.”

Bioenergy fuel

By consuming up to 20% of all the country’s used oil for the production of emulsions, BME helps to effectively mitigate this risk – while also helping to uplift local communities from where it sources the used oil.

The company utilises used oil as a bioenergy fuel source that is completely consumed in blasting, a system that it has honed and refined over three decades. Well-developed and accurate formulations comply with safety regulations and adhere to the company’s ESG goals. Govender said that while used oil was readily available as it was a waste product, there were variousgrades, all containing different contaminants and components.

“Therefore, all of the used oil that we collect and process undergoes extensive verification, quality control analysis and validation at our R&D laboratory,” he said. “The final emulsions that we produce using these technologies are also quality tested to determine their stability, shelf life and efficiency for mining.”

He confirmed that BME was also investigating viable alternatives to traditional used oil. This would not only enable the company to further pursue greener and more sustainable sourcing, but would also increase its participation in the circular economy.

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