Anglo American Gypsum Turns Mining Waste Into Bricks

Words: Dan Kamys Anglo American Gypsum Turns Mining Waste Into Bricks

??

By Jackie Wills

Anglo American Gypsum is turning mining waste into low cost homes. The company's eMalahleni plant in Mpumalanga province, South Africa, purifies waste water from five mines and turns it into drinking water for local people. The waste produced from this process – 200 tons of gypsum a day – is being made into bricks to build homes that will enable workers moving away from mine villages to buy affordable homes.

The plant is the first of its kind in the mining industry, recovering 99.5% of its water and providing 80,000 people with drinking water. This meets 20% of the daily needs and those of the five mines.

Mining operations generate mineral and non-mineral waste. Traditionally, non-mineral waste has gone into landfill, but the gypsum from this plant alone could provide up to 7,000 homes a year.

Last year Anglo American's Zimele communities fund helped set up enterprises to manufacture bricks and build the homes. The production process is the same as standard brick-making but half the sand or cement is replaced with gypsum. Gypsum brick houses cost less to build and each produces three tonnes less CO2.

Local contractors built 66 three-bedroom homes almost entirely from gypsum-based materials, and the first residents moved in at the end of 2010. Another 300 homes will be built in 2011.

It took 15 years of research by Anglo American to investigate uses of waste gypsum and conclude that the greatest potential was in building materials. The plant aims to produce zero waste, a move which will mean big cuts in running costs. It is designed to be run as a social or commercial enterprise that will continue meeting local peoples' water needs and the gypsum bricks will help safeguard its future.

Jackie Wills is part of the wordworks network.

This content is brought to you by Guardian Professional.
National Masonry Associations Arrive to Help Salvage Historic Chimneys For Palisades Fire Memorial
May 2025

Los Angeles, CA – Beginning in the final week of May, an assembly of masonry teams will arrive in the Pacific Palisades to help salvage the historically-significant chimneys identified through House Museum’s disaster recovery initiative, Project Chimney.

The Cost of a Job: An Ever-Moving Target
May 2025

I look at a well-functioning estimating department and think, as I imagine most do, of the age-old question: "What came first – the chicken or the egg?" How do you know how much it costs to do a job before you do it? The truth is that pricing a job is an

MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Episode 21 Recap: Justin Meyer, VP of Sales - The Quikrete Companies
May 2025

For this episode of the MASONRY STRONG Podcast, Justin Meyer joins the MCAA in Indianapolis to talk about where his love for the industry started and what it's like attending the CMHA meetings.

The Evolution and Innovation of Concrete Unit Pavers
May 2025

When concrete unit pavers were first produced in Europe after the second World War, they were used as a replacement for clay brick pavers due to a lack of raw materials needed to produce that product. The primary emphasis was function with little to no co