Nichols, OG 2006, 'Developing Completion Criteria for Native Ecosystem Reconstruction ― A Challenge for the Mining Industry', in AB Fourie & M Tibbett (eds), Mine Closure 2006: Proceedings of the First International Seminar on Mine Closure, Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Perth, pp. 61-74, https://doi.org/10.36487/ACG_repo/605_Nichols (https://papers.acg.uwa.edu.au/p/605_Nichols/) Abstract: Companies throughout Australia and in other countries are increasingly adopting an objective of establishing a sustainable native ecosystem following mining. This raises significant issues associated with the mine closure process, specifically in relation to developing and meeting completion criteria for this native ecosystem rehabilitation – will the regulators and the broader community accept defined standards as part of an overall mine closure plan, so that if met, they will agree to lease relinquishment? Early attempts to set specific completion criteria, for example in the mineral sand mining industry, resulted in targets that were not based on what was known to be achievable using current accepted best practicable rehabilitation methods. As a result, a detailed review of rehabilitation monitoring methods and data at RGC Mineral Sands Eneabba mine was undertaken in 1996 and revised criteria were developed (Nichols, 1996; Peterson et al., 1996). Difficulties with establishing specific criteria for mine rehabilitation in semi-arid areas of the WA Goldfields were also encountered by Brearley and Osborne (2000). Both regulatory authorities and mining companies are now addressing this issue across Australia, but there are still relatively few examples of mine closure strategies that have been through a full public and technical review process and then been signed off by both the mining company and all regulatory authorities. Recent examples from Australian mining projects in different parts of the country demonstrate that significant progress has been made in relation to the development of achievable ecological completion criteria. Detailed work has been conducted at Alcoa World Alumina’s bauxite mines in WA (Nichols et al., 2005), mines in the goldfields of WA (Brearley and Osborne, 2000), coal mines in Queensland’s Bowen Basin and NSW’s Hunter Valley (Nichols 2004, 2005), CRL’s heavy mineral sand mine on North Stradbroke Island, Queensland (Nichols and Foot, 2002) and other mines. This paper reviews the approaches these companies have taken, and by focusing specifically on the coal mining studies, illustrates principles that could be adapted to a wide range of situations where the goal is to establish a sustainable native ecosystem following mining.