Turning Liability into Asset: Nature-Based Solutions for Mine Land Rehabilitation

As global climate risks intensify, rehabilitation of degraded mine lands is increasingly framed not just as restoration, but as climate adaptation and nature-positive development. Nature-Based Solutions (NBS) leverage ecosystem processes — like plant succession, soil biology, and watershed restoration — to repair landscapes.

What Are Nature-Based Solutions?

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), NBS are actions that protect, sustainably manage, and restore natural or modified ecosystems to address societal challenges — including climate change, disaster risk, and biodiversity loss.

In mining landscapes, NBS include:

  • Reforestation and afforestation
  • Wetland re-establishment
  • Phytoremediation (using plants to extract contaminants)
  • Agroforestry integration
  • Constructed floodplain forests

International Examples

Australia:
Phytoremediation trials in mine tailings using Eucalyptus species have reduced heavy metal concentrations in soils, enhancing subsequent agricultural use.

Canada:
In the Sudbury region (nickel mining), liming and reforestation restored soil pH and enabled forest regrowth on severely degraded terrains.

South Africa:
Constructed wetlands are being used to treat acid mine drainage naturally before it enters rivers.

These projects demonstrate how “functional landscapes” can replace degraded mine sites.

Research & Data

A 2021 study in the Journal of Environmental Management found that:

  • NBS can improve soil health metrics (organic matter and water infiltration) by 35–60% over 5–7 years.
  • Carbon sequestration potential in rehabilitated landscapes often exceeds initial projections, providing climate finance opportunities.

NBS for mine lands aligns with:

  • Landscape restoration commitments under the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration
  • National climate strategies
  • Green Growth frameworks

These approaches dovetail with carbon trading or ecosystem service payment mechanisms — offering economic incentives for rehabilitation beyond compliance.

Application in Kenya

In Kenya, NBS can address multiple national priorities:

  • Landscape degradation
  • Food security
  • Climate resilience
  • Community livelihoods

By integrating NBS into mine closure planning, rehabilitated sites can become productive agroforestry systems, community forests, wetlands, or biodiversity corridors.

The CESMECC webinar will explore these models with practical case studies and implementation frameworks.

Let’s Work Together

Whether for government agencies, private sector companies, NGOs, or community-based organizations, CESMECC offers actionable insights and strategies that align with environmental best practices and global sustainability goals.

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