Mining Mirror January 2019 | Page 31

Lessons from the past Trekkopje’s unexpected legacy The desalination plant provides water to most of the mining operations in the Erongo region and to towns in the area, like Swakopmund and Henties Bay. A desalination plant that was constructed by a uranium mine to provide the operation with water in 2010, today provides most of the mines and people in the Erongo region of Namibia with water, writes Leon Louw. www.miningmirror.co.za T he Erongo Desalination Plant (EDP) can produce about 20 million cubic metres of potable water each year (currently it is producing 12 million cubic metres of water). It is the first and remains one of the very few desalination facilities to be built in southern Africa and is located in the village of Wlotzkasbaken, about 30km north of Swakopmund. State entity NamWater taps into the treatment facility’s water production and distributes it to Swakopmund and surrounds. Ironically, the desalination plant was constructed by a mining company; it was never intended to provide the Erongo region with drinking water. French company Orano Mining Namibia, previously Areva Resources Namibia (the company changed its name in January 2018), acquired a mining license to develop the Trekkopje uranium mine in The water pipes connecting NamWater and the Erongo Desalination Plant. JANUARY 2019 MINING MIRROR [29]