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SUSTAINABLE BUILT ENVIRONMENT

Adhika Ardhana

1306388912

Aaron William

1306437164

Fajar Muhammad

1306437170

Daniel Andiga Wibisana

1306437076

CIVIL ENGINEERING DEPARTEMENT


ENGINEERING FACULTY
UNIVERSITAS INDONESIA
DEPOK 2015

Preface

We are given a task to research and write a report about a case study of a current
environmental issue that is related to the development of environmental sustainability
especially in Indonesia. These cases may include environmental issues such as the growth
of a population, water crisis, scarcity and crisis of energy, climate change and global
warming, and deforestation. Students are to study these cases and produce a report on
their findings that include the negative impacts on the environment and to also construct
possible solutions.
It is important to understand the environmental issues that the world is facing
today because it will have an impact on sustainable development. Sustainable
development is the development that humans are trying to achieve in the present without
harming or causing negative impacts on society in the future. Development is usually
driven to satisfy ones need without realizing the impacts on the future. We need to
balance the different and competing needs of people so that we do not run out of
resources in the future. Climate change is one example of unsustainable development as a
result of environmental irresponsibility. One of the main objectives of this paper is to
understand the problems that our environment is facing due to activities that human
create to fulfill their survival needs. It is also for students to come up with solutions to
reduce the negative impacts on the environment.

Depok, May 11, 2015

Table of Contexts

Preface....2
Table of Contexts3
Chapter 1 Preliminary
1.1 Background of the Problem..4
Chapter 2 Contents
2.1 Coal Technical Description..7
2.2 Coal Mining Methods...9
2.3 Coal Processing Methods ....10
2.4 Environmental Impacts.12
2.5 Wildlife Impacts.......13
Chapter 3 Conclusion
3.1 Pollution Prevention and Control..14
3.3 Coal Waste Water Treatment Processes....16
Reference.18

CHAPTER 1
PRELIMINARY

1.1Background of the Problem


In this era, technologies are growing rapidly around the world, where everyone is
influenced with it. Our daily lives depend on it both at night and also at day. With the rapid use
of these technologies, energy is needed to initiate our daily activities. It can be for our use of
electricity and for the manufacturing of products. So where does energy come from?
Energy comes from the processing of coal. With a rapid demand in energy, then coal is
extracted from our environment regularly around the world. In the case of a huge coal mining
activity in South Kalimantan, Indonesia, coals are being extracted every day where negative
impacts may occur because of the high amount of mining activities.
Indonesia started its coal activity twenty years ago after the fall of Soeharto. Since then,
the reform era began, which changed the politics of Indonesia and led to uproar of Indonesian
and international coal companies. Political authorities found that the coal mining activity is
profitable, especially in issuing new mining licenses, exploration permits, and production
permits. With this, about 10000 permits were granted, and with so many granted permits, not all
were mapped making unknown exact exploration locations. Lots of Indonesian coal companies
began to rise, which led to sideline the international coal companies. With emerging companies,
lots of money were made and lost, due to struggling Indonesian companies for dominance.
It was found that with increasing demand of coal activity, there was proliferation on coal
mafias, lessening of transparency, thugs were hired, corruption expanded, illegal mining
operation rose, and government coordination was now gone. The condition with the political
state of Indonesia led to more explorations granted making Indonesias environment destroyed,
especially in Kalimantan where hundreds of illegal coal companies can be found. This destroyed
environment is caused with the lack of environmental responsibility, especially from the small
illegal coal company, which isnt environmentally responsible.

Indonesias emergence in the coal mining activity sector has been increasing by 460%
since 2000. Today Indonesia can be considered to be the worlds largest coal exporter in just a
brief period of time. In 2012 it was found that Indonesia supplied 39% of global seaborne
thermal coal exports, which is an increase of 14% just from earlier 2002. With this increase,
Indonesias environment is being tragically destroyed from deforestation and nothing is being
done until now, making places where coal mining activity is concentrated, being totally
destroyed, which can be seen in the Island of Kalimantan.
Today, Indonesias coal production is concentrated in Kalimantan, which counts for 40%
of the countrys reserves. Most of the coal productions are situated in South Kalimantan, which
has become a massive part of Indonesias coal production story where it is still growing. South
Kalimantan has been estimated to produce 79 Million Tonnes of coal in 2008, and rose rapidly in
just a few years later to 118 Million Tonnes of coal extracted. South Kalimantan was also
estimated to take two-thirds of Indonesias coal exports, which is very devastating when looking
at the results of these coal-mining activities.
Reports stating about the legal coal companies in South Kalimantan states about 450 coal
companies were granted by the government. A coal company is permitted to have more than 1
territory it was tracked that the official companies cover about a million hectares of area from
South Kalimantans total area of 3.7 million hectares. This does not include hundreds of other
illegal mining companies. It is concluded that about a-third of South Kalimantan is given
towards coal mining activity and their destruction of the environment around.
South Kalimantan is more than just a major player in Indonesias coal industry. South
Kalimantans rapid increase in coal output and resulting huge increase in carbon emissions
contributes to global climate change, given the dominant and growing role of Indonesian coal in
the international coal market. Coal mining activities in South Kalimantan creates a negative
impact towards the environment around the area, which is a-third of South Kalimantan. This is a
result from coal companies in not acting responsibly in treating the environment after their coal
has been taken. Coal companies will most likely abandon their extraction point and leave the

polluted waste to cover South Kalimantans environment and relocate to another extraction point,
leaving hectares of polluted waste covering the waters.
It was revealed from green peaces investigation on South Kalimantan, that most of the
areas are being highly polluted from the wastes of coal mining activities. These wastes account
for many hazardous waters around South Kalimantan with a low pH, making the lives of people
living there unacceptable. These hazardous waters are found to contaminate bigger water bodies
making the whole of Kalimantan polluted. Coal mining companies activities are still on going
and making harsh environment status increasing around Kalimantan.
With the increase of coal mining activities permitted by the government, then there will
also be an increase in the pollution created. These harmful chemical wastes will then cover the
whole area of South Kalimantan in the future and it will become a harsh area for the ones living
on those areas, whether it is the environment, wild life, and the people living there. There are lots
of reason how South Kalimantan is rapidly bing polluted, and with it there are also a bunch of
negative effects. This report will analyze further on the methods of coal mining activities and
their results to the environment around it, where, who, and how it pollutes will be explained.

CHAPTER 2
CONTENTS

2.1 Coal Technical Description


Coal is one of fossil fuel. The general description is flammable sedimentary rock, form
by organic sediment, The main are the remains of plants and formed through biochemical and
geochemical processes. Coal is primarily consists of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Coal is also
an organic rock that has physical properties and chemical complex that can be found in various
forms.
Coal forms from the accumulation of plant debris, usually in a swamp environment.
When plant debris dies and falls into the swamp the standing water of the swamp protects it from
decay. Swamp waters are usually deficient in oxygen, which would react with the plant debris
and cause it to decay. This lack of oxygen allows the plant debris to persist. In addition, insects
and other organisms that might consume the plant debris on land do not survive well under water
in an oxygen deficient environment. To form the thick layer of plant debris required to produce a
coal seam the rate of plant debris accumulation must be greater than the rate of decay. Once a
thick layer of plant debris is formed it must be buried by sediments such as mud or sand. These
are typically washed into the swamp by a flooding river. The weight of these materials compacts
the plant debris and aids in its transformation into coal. About ten feet of plant debris will
compact into just one foot of coal. Plant debris accumulates very slowly. So, accumulating ten
feet of plant debris will take a long time. The fifty feet of plant debris needed to make a five-foot
thick coal seam would require thousands of years to accumulate. During that long time the water
level of the swamp must remain stable. If the water becomes too deep the plants of the swamp
will drown and if the water cover is not maintained the plant debris will decay. To form a coal
seam the ideal conditions of perfect water depth must be maintained for a very long time. If you
are an astute reader you are probably wondering: "How can fifty feet of plant debris accumulate
in water that is only a few feet deep?" The answer to that question is the primary reason that the
formation of a coal seam is a highly unusual occurrence. It can only occur under one of two

conditions: 1) a rising water level that perfectly keeps pace with the rate of plant debris
accumulation; or, 2) a subsiding landscape that perfectly keeps pace with the rate of plant debris
accumulation. Most coal seams are thought to have formed under condition #2 in a delta
environment. On a delta large amounts of river sediments are being deposited on a small area of
Earth's crust and the weight of those sediments causes the subsidence. For a coal seam to form
perfect conditions of plant debris accumulation and perfect conditions of subsidence must occur
on a landscape that maintains this perfect balance for a very long time. It is very easy to
understand why the conditions for forming coal has occurred only a small number of times
throughout Earth's history. The formation of a coal requires the coincidence of highly improbable
events.
For the peat to become coal, it must be buried by sediment. Burial compacts the peat and,
consequently, much water is squeezed out during the first stages of burial. Continued burial and
the addition of heat and time cause the complex hydrocarbon compounds in the peat to break
down and alter in a variety of ways. The gaseous alteration products are typically expelled from
the deposit, and the deposit becomes more and more carbon-rich as the other elements disperse.
The stages of this trend proceed from plant debris through peat, lignite, sub-bituminous coal,
bituminous coal, anthracite coal, to a pure carbon mineral. Based on the rate of formation process
which is controlled by pressure, heat and time, coal is generally divided into five classes:
anthracite, bituminous, sub-bituminous, lignite and peat.
First, Anthracite coal is the highest grade, with a shimmering black metallic, containing
between 86% - 98% of the elements carbon (C) to a moisture content of less than 8%. After that
we got bituminous containing 68-86% carbon element (C) and the water content of 8-10% by
weight. This type of coal is the most widely mined in Australia. Sub-bituminous coal contains
less carbon and a lot of water, and therefore a source of heat is less efficient compared to
bituminous. Lignite or brown coal is very soft coal containing 35-75% water by weight. Peat,
porous and has a moisture content above 75% and the lowest calorific value.

2.2 Coal Mining Methods

2.2.1 Strip Mining


In strip mining, also known as surface mining, the ground covering is first removed to
expose the coal seam for extraction. It involves scraping away earth and rocks to get to coal
buried near the surface. Sometimes, mountains are literally torn apart to reach thin coal seams,
which leave permanent scars on the landscape. There are elements of a surface mining operation,
which include:

Top soil removal and storage

Loading and transporting the coal

Drilling and blasting the strata overlying

Backfilling with grading,

Spreading top soil over the graded area

Establishing vegetation to ensuring

the coal seam

Loading and transporting this


fragmented overburden material

control of soil erosion and water quality

Drilling and blasting the coal seam

FIGURE 1.1 Schematic depiction of the unit operations in a surface coal mine. SOURCE: Royal Utilities

2.2.2 Underground Mining

Underground mining is usually done by the room-and-pillar mining or longwall

mining method. Even in mines where the longwall method is the principal extraction method, the
development of the mine and the longwall panels is accomplished by room-and-pillar continuous
mining. The coal seam is accessed by both a slope and a shaft. Arrangement of ventilation fan is
shown adjacent to the surface opening of the shaft. The shaft has an elevator for lowering and
raising miners and materials. Coal gathered from the workings by various conveyors is then
transported to the surface by the slope conveyor. The surface features are the raw coal storage,
the coal preparation plant, the clean coal storage, and the train load out. A longwall section and a
room-and-pillar continuous miner section are below.

FIGURE 1.2 Schematic showing underground coal mine workings. SOURCE: CONSOL Energy
Inc.

2.2.3 Long wall Mining

Long wall mining is a form of underground coal mining that is characterized by

high recovery and extraction rates and feasible only in flat lying, thick, and uniform coal beds.
First, a high powered cutting machine is passed across the coal. It shears away broken coal and is
continued away by a floor level conveyor system. Long wall mining extracts all machineminable coal between the floor and ceiling within a contiguous block of coal, leaving no support
pillars within the panel area.

2.3 Coal Processing Methods

The process of coal mining has been improving since early times and the

composition of coals mined in different areas is varied widely. Coal preparation plants have
evolved, but the processes in coal preparation plants follow similar steps:
Crushing and breaking. Coal must be crushed to an acceptable size for
treatment in the preparation plant. Feeder breakers, rotary breakers, hammer
mills, and roll crushers are typical crushing and breaking devices.
Sizing. Different sizes of coal use different cleaning processes. So raw coal
entering the plant can be sieved into three or four sizes.
Storage and stockpiling. Coal is stored in silos or stockpiled before and after
cleaning. Raw coal is stored between the mine and the preparation plant, and
clean coal is stored between the preparation plant and product load out.
Density separation. Raw coal consists of organic and mineral matter
components. Coal is cleaned by separating the lower-density organic material
from the higher-density refuse. A suspension of finely divided magnetite in
water is chosen to achieve a given degree of separation depending on the
characteristics of the coal, the desired product quality.
Froth flotation. Separating fine coal particles from mineral matter on a density
basis are difficult, so and this is cleaned by froth flotation. Froth flotation is a
process that exploits the attachment of air bubbles to organic coal particle
surfaces. Surfactants are used to create a hydrophobic surface on the coal
particles to be floated, and a fuel oil, is used to promote piling of the floated
particles to facilitate their removal.

Coal drying. Cleaning by froth flotation can produce an excess amount


of moisture in the product. Wet coal goes through thermal drying process, in
which it is dried in the hot gas generated by a coal or gas-fired burner to
reduce the moisture content.

Refuse and tailings management. Waste management is an important part of


coal preparation. Coarse waste is transported to the solids disposal area,
where it can be placed in a suitable landfill. Tailings are fine solid waste in

water that is usually transported by pipeline to an impoundment area. The


water used to transport tailings is then clarified so it can be reused in the
plant.

2.4 Environmental Impacts

Mining is an activity search, explore, process, use and sell the result of minerals

in the form of mineral, coal, geothermal and oil and mining activities gas. Supposedly utilize
natural resources with environmentally sound, so that environmental sustainability is maintained.
As we know based on data from the Indonesian Coal Mining Association in 2001, the stock of
coal reserves in South Kalimantan for example, are measured (for sure) was 2.428 billion tons,
and are indicated approximately 4.101 billion tons. So at least, until now, there are coal reserves
that have been found to be 6.529 billion tons. By the data that we know we can draw the
conclusion that any presence of coal mining activities can cause a great impact to the
surrounding environment. There are some of the impact is caused because coal mining such as
water pollution, air pollution, soil pollution.

2.2.1 Water Pollution

Coal mining use some chemicals that can interfere with water such as
mercury, cyanide Sulfuric acid, arsenic and the other chemical. Some of
chemicals dumped into nearby streams causing the river are contaminated and
possible leaking pipes can causes chemicals spilled into the river. The release of
toxic chemicals into the water dangerous to life of flora and fauna. Apart from
mining pollution also need water for wash impurities from the coal itself. Waste
coal washing after investigation contains substances that are very harmful to
human health if the water is consumed. The waste contains sulfur (b), mercury
(Hg), manganese (Mn), sulfuric acid (H2SO4), and lead (Pb). Hg and Pb is a
heavy metal that can cause skin diseases in humans such as skin cancer. For this

problem should any mining company should have its own land to dispose of
waste that can disturb the environment and pipes should be checked periodically
to determine whether a leak in the pipeline or not.

2.2.2 Air pollution

Coal combustion produces nitrogen oxides, smog, acid rain, and toxic air

pollution. Acid rain occurs when contaminated gases become trapped inside the cloud. Clouds
can float up to hundreds or even thousands of kilometers before finally releasing acid rain. Acid
rain is rain water with a pH of less than 5.7, while normal pH 7. Acid rain water usually occurs
because of the increased levels of nitric and sulfuric acid in air pollution. This usually occurs
because of increased emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NO) in the
atmosphere. Other toxic chemicals will also be separated and mixed with nutrients. If these
nutrients are absorbed by plants will inhibit growth and accelerate the falling of leaves, and the
plant will be stricken with disease, drought, and death. The effect from all of the combustion is
burn lung tissue, asthma, and makes people susceptible to chronic respiratory disease. Some of
the coal combustion can be reduced but not all of them can be reduced because it is in the air.

2.2.3. Soil Pollution

Coal mining can damage vegetation, destroying the genetic soil profile, replacing

the genetic soil profile, destroying wildlife and habitat, degradation of air quality, land use
change and to some extent can be altering the general topography of the mining area
permanently. In addition, coal mining also produces methane gas, this gas has potential as a
greenhouse gas. The contribution of methane gas caused by human activity, contributing 10.5%
in greenhouse gas emissions.

2.5 Wildlife Impacts

Huge areas of Indonesian Borneos wilderness, which are lands with


strong links to indigenous communities, have suffered to support the increase on
coal exports. These lands have been removed and replaced as coal mining
concessions. New coal mine plants will not be the only thing that will cut open
the heart of Borneo, but as well as new infrastructure for coal transportation,
which will also be carved through the forests that are home to one of the richest
tropical forest ecosystems on the planet. The forests provide natural habitats for
the endangered orangutan and other species of primates, as well as for important
bird life, including the argus pheasant and hornbills.

The coal industry releases acids and sulphates into rivers, which are pollutants

that destroy water supplies. These as a result, harm the fish stocks and contaminate crops,
leading to loss of livelihoods, a reduction in food sources and health problems for local
communities.

Deforestation is also the result of coal mining, which causes floods in several

places in Kalimantan. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) reports that flooding has become
commonplace in Samarinda, in East Kalimantan. Major floods have affected families and
disrupted the economy, transportation, employment and livelihoods.

CHAPTER 3
CONCLUSION

3.1 Pollution Prevention and Control

The key to minimizing pollution associated with mining activities are early

planning and careful design of operations. A mining development plan and closure and
restoration plan must be approved and prepared before the process of mining can begin. For
implementation and monitoring of environmental measures, specific responsibility or task must
be assigned. These plans define the sequence and behavior of extraction operations and detail the
methods to be used in closure and restoration. A development plan must be addressed to prevent
and control coal mining pollution, which include:

Removal and proper storage of topsoil

Early restoration of worked-out areas to minimize the extent of open areas

Diversion and management of surface and groundwater to minimize water pollution


problems

Identification and management of areas with high potential for acid mine drainage
(AMD) generation

Minimize the of generation of AMD by reducing disturbed areas and isolating drainage
streams by avoiding contacts with sulfur bearing materials

A water management plan for operations and post-closure including minimization of


liquid wastes by methods such as recycling water from tailings wash plant

Minimization of spillage losses by proper design and operation of coal transportation and
transfer facilities

Reduction of dust by re-vegetation and by good maintenance of roads and work areas.
Minimizing drop distances, covering equipment, and wetting storage piles

Controlling the release of chemicals used in extraction processes

Control of methane, a greenhouse gas to less than one percent by volume, minimizing the
risk of explosion in closed mines. Recover methane where feasible

Proper storage and handling of fuel and chemicals used on site to avoid spill areas

And lastly, the mine closure and restoration plan should include recovery of open
pits, waste piles, sedimentation basins, and abandoned mine, mill, and camp
sites. These plans should include:

Return land to conditions capable of supporting prior land use or other environmentally
acceptable uses

Use of overburden for backfill and top for recovery

Contour slopes to minimize erosion and runoff

Plant vegetation to prevent erosion and encourage self-sustaining development of a


productive ecosystem on the land

Management of post-closure acid mine drainage and extraction waste

Budget and schedule for pre and post-abandonment reclamation activities

3.3 Coal Waste Water Treatment Processes

Some of these waste waters can be strongly acidic and can contain high

levels of dissolved salts and heavy metals. Others can have a near neutral pH with lower
concentrations of heavy metals but with higher concentrations of silica and sometimes
phosphates.

A coal mine water treatment plants need to be constructed that can recover

high quality drinking water from all of these different coal impacted waters. This water
treatment process for coal impacted water would include:
1. Fine coal and suspended solids are removed from the feed water using the appropriate
technology for the water quality that is to be treated

2. A heavy metals, silica, phosphate and hardness removal stage using a chemical
precipitation process.
3. Product from the chemical precipitation stage would then go through a clarification
process followed by pH adjustment, ultra-filtration and reverse osmosis stages, so as to
create the product water.
4. The remaining waste water would then be reacted, using proprietary process technology,
to produce gypsum and a weak caustic solution, which is a suitable reagent for the initial
chemical precipitation stage and is usually able to supply the whole of that reagent
requirement.

The use of this solution makes the cost of reagent for the chemical precipitation
stages the same as if a combination use of lime and limestone.

If the sodium and chloride concentrations exceed the reuse or discharge criteria,
an appropriate portion of the brine is be put through further concentration steps to
recover the maximum proportion of reusable water.

This technology process should be able to achieve 100% recovery of the


contaminated water, making the mine site a zero liquid discharge

But if need be, additional process steps can be added when they are needed. These

include fuels oils and greases removal, uranium removal using ion exchange technology, ion
exchange modules to remove nitrates, and recovery of reusable salts from any excess solution.
The installed technology and process provide a cost effective, practical and reliable solution. The
design would also take into account the whole life cycle cost, including the disposal options for
the precipitation residues and for any water solution that cannot be recycled within the process.
The technology makes water flow and quality changes easy to manage.

REFERENCES

http://green.kompasiana.com/penghijauan/2013/07/16/sekilas-tentang-tambang-batubaradi-kalimantan-selatan-mutiara-hitam-di-balik-endapan-bumi-577305.html

http://thejakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/news/coal-mines-polluting-half-south-kalimantansrivers-lakes-greenpeace/

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/03/18/coal-mining-%E2%80%98destroying
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http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/news/Blogs/makingwaves/devastation-fromcoal-mining-in-south-kaliman/blog/51571/

National Research Council. Coal: Research and Development to Support National Energy
Policy. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2007.

http://www.redd-monitor.org/2013/01/25/the-point-of-no-return-how-indonesias-coalmining-expansion-is-accelerating-climate-change/

http://www.miga.org/documents/CoalMiningandProduction.pdf

http://www.miwatek.co.za/solutions/coal-mine-water-treatment

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