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Proposed EU Directive on the Management of Waste from the Extractive Industries

TECHNICAL ANNEX

TABLE1

ESTIMATED MINERAL WASTE PRODUCTION IN THE UK

Table

(Source: DEFRA, 19.6.2003. Note — the clay waste to saleable product ratio used in the above table is considered by the British Geological Survey (BGS) to significantly over-estimate the amount of waste produced by that sector. At opencast coal sites the ratio of waste to product may be in the range 12:1 to 18:1, although this is returned to the void as part of the restoration process)

TABLE 2

SUMMARY OF ACTIVE MINES AND QUARRIES IN THE UK IN 2003

Mineral worked

Number of active sites

England

Wales

Scotland

Northern Ireland

Sand and Gravel

801

578

26

119

78

Limestone

347

264

51

13

19

Sandstone

305

200

29

41

35

Igneous and Metamorphic Rock

205

50

12

97

46

Common Clay and Shale

178

164

5

7

2

Peat

114

76

3

35

0

Chalk

65

61

0

0

4

Opencast Coal

55

27

7

21

0

Silica Sand

48

35

3

10

0

Slate

41

26

14

1

0

Deep mined coal

26

18

8

0

0

China clay

17

17

0

0

0

Others*

101

85

5

9

2

Total

2303

1601

163

353

186

(Source: BGS BritPits Database).
* A full list of mineral types worked in the UK is given in Table 6

TABLE 3

UK EMPLOYMENT IN THE MINERALS INDUSTRY, 2001

Mineral

Great Britain (a)

Northern Ireland

Mines

 

Quarries

Total

Underground

Surface

   

Ball clay

-

-

312

312

-

Calcspar

-

-

8

8

-

Chalk

-

-

557

557

(c)…

Chert and flint

-

-

3

3

-

China clay

-

-

482

482

-

Clay and shale

-

-

1073

1073

(c)…

Coal (b)

(e)9535

3332

12867

-

Dolomite

-

-

999

999

-

Fireclay

2

-

32

34

(c)…

Fuller’s earth

-

-

8

8

-

Gypsum

123

22

33

178

-

Honestone

3

1

-

4

-

Igneous rock

-

-

3065

3065

368

Limestone

37

33

4769

4839

173

Oil and gas

-

-

-

(d)

-

Ore minerals

16

19

15

50

-

Peat

-

-

253

253

-

Potash

512

216

-

728

-

Salt

31

20

3

54

(c)…

Sand and gravel

-

-

7742

7742

427

Sandstone

-

-

1593

1593

347

Silica sand

6

6

826

838

-

Silica stone

-

-

2

2

-

Slate

6

39

502

547

-

Soapstone and talc

-

-

2

2

-

Others

-

-

-

-

286

Total

10271

356

25611

36238

1601

(a) where more than one mineral is extracted in a mine or quarry all employment is attributed to the chief mineral
(b) at March 2002
(c) included with ‘Others
(d) estimated workforce employed offshore, including personnel on offshore installations, mobile drilling rigs, service vessels, support barges and survey teams, 15,700 as at February 2001
(e) including surface workers at mines

Source: BGS UK Minerals Yearbook 2002, using data from the Office of National Statistics and Department of Enterprise Trade and Investment (Northern Ireland)

TABLE 4

NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES AT WORKPLACES WITHIN THE MAIN MINERAL SECTORS IN 2000

Workplace (site) size by employees by SIC sub-sector

Employee size bands*

 

1-49

50-299

300+

Total

1421 : Operation of gravel and sand pits

1,134

49

2

1,185

1411 : Quarrying of stone for construction

517

8

-

525

1412 : Quarrying of limestone, gypsum and chalk

268

23

1

292

1010 : Mining and agglomeration of hard coal

237

30

14

281

1422 : Mining of clays and kaolin

152

23

1

176

1450 : Other mining and quarrying nec

136

2

-

138

1413 : Quarrying of slate

120

-

-

120

1430 : Mining of chemical & fertilizer minerals

56

1

1

58

1030 : Extraction and agglomeration of peat

39

-

-

39

1320 : Mining: non-ferrous metal ores

18

-

-

18

1440 : Production of salt

13

5

-

18

1310 : Mining of iron ores

4

-

-

4

1020 : Mining and agglomeration of lignite

1

-

-

1

Total

2,695

141

19

2,855

Source: Annual Business Inquiry: Workplace Analysis
Note: The figures in this table were collected on a different basis to those in Table 3 and relate to a different year.

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