After energy resources are extracted — whether from coal mines, gas fields, hydroelectric reservoirs or oil wells — the disturbed land must be rehabilitated to restore ecological function, ensure safety and meet regulatory requirements.
Why Rehabilitation is Required
Energy extraction causes:
- Physical disturbance: Excavation, stockpiles, compaction, explosives
- Chemical contamination: Acid mine drainage, heavy metal leaching, hydrocarbon spillage
- Hydrological alteration: Changed drainage patterns, groundwater table effects
- Habitat destruction: Loss of vegetation, soil and fauna habitat
Rehabilitation aims to restore a self-sustaining ecosystem, minimise contamination risks, and return land to productive use (farming, conservation, or modified land use).
Mechanical (Physical) Rehabilitation Processes
Mechanical processes reshape and stabilise the physical landscape:
- Backfilling: Waste rock and overburden replaced into mined voids to restore original ground surface
- Reshaping: Slopes are graded to stable angles that resist erosion (typically ≤ 1V:3H for revegetation)
- Drainage design: Contour banks, catchment drains and sediment basins installed to control stormwater runoff
2. Topsoil Handling and Replacement
- Topsoil stripping: During mining, topsoil (and subsoil layers) are stripped and stored separately to preserve the soil seed bank and microbial communities
- Topsoil replacement: Stored topsoil spread over reshaped landform before revegetation — critical for plant establishment
- Good topsoil management retains viable seeds, root fragments and soil organisms
3. Compaction Reduction
- Heavy machinery compacts soil, reducing infiltration and root penetration
- Ripping: Deep tine ripping breaks compacted layers to improve drainage and aeration
- Subsoiling: Deep cultivation before topsoil placement
4. Contamination Management
- Acid mine drainage: Sulfide-containing rock exposed to air and water oxidises to produce sulfuric acid. Managed by:
- Encapsulating sulfide rock in clay barriers (limiting oxygen/water contact)
- Lime addition to neutralise acid
- Constructed wetlands using sulfate-reducing bacteria
- Hydrocarbon contamination: Bioremediation or excavation and treatment of oil-contaminated soils
Biological (Ecological) Rehabilitation Processes
Biological processes restore living communities:
1. Revegetation
- Species selection: Native species appropriate to the region and ecosystem being restored; often includes a mix of grasses, shrubs and trees
- Legumes first: Nitrogen-fixing species (e.g. acacias) planted early to improve soil nitrogen for subsequent species
- Seeding vs. planting: Direct seeding is cheaper at scale; tube stock planting accelerates establishment in dry areas
- Nurse crops: Fast-growing cover crops stabilise soil and provide shade for slower-growing native species
2. Organic Matter and Soil Biology Restoration
- Compost and mulch added to bare surfaces improve moisture retention and provide carbon for soil microbes
- Mycorrhizal inoculation: Fungal inoculants added to soil to re-establish beneficial fungi that assist plant nutrition
- Biomass retention: Fallen logs, coarse woody debris retained on rehabilitated sites provide habitat and gradually decompose to build soil
3. Weed Control
- Disturbed ground is highly vulnerable to weed invasion
- Regular monitoring and control (chemical, manual, biological) needed for years after establishment
- Competitive planting: Dense native plantings outcompete weed establishment
4. Fauna Reintroduction
- After vegetation establishes, fauna begin to colonise naturally
- Nest box provision: Hollow-dependent species can colonise before trees are old enough to form natural hollows
- Wildlife monitoring: Camera traps, spotlighting, call detectors track recolonisation progress
Timeframes for Rehabilitation
| Process |
Approximate Timeframe |
| Landform reshaping and drainage establishment |
1–5 years |
| Topsoil replacement and initial revegetation |
1–3 years |
| Ground cover establishment (grasses, forbs) |
2–5 years |
| Shrub layer establishment |
5–15 years |
| Tree canopy closure |
20–50+ years |
| Development of soil biological communities |
50–200+ years |
| Equivalent ecosystem function to pre-disturbance |
Decades to centuries |
Full ecological restoration to pre-disturbance condition is rarely achieved — rehabilitation aims for a stable, functional ecosystem that meets agreed performance criteria.
Coal Seam Gas and Fracking Site Rehabilitation
CSG sites require:
- Capping and sealing of wells to prevent gas leaks
- Removal of produced water ponds and treatment of brine waste
- Revegetation of well pads and access tracks
- Long-term monitoring of groundwater
VCAA FOCUS: Distinguish between mechanical and biological rehabilitation processes. Mechanical processes prepare the physical substrate (landform, drainage, soil); biological processes restore living communities. A well-designed rehabilitation program uses both in sequence.