A Holistic Model for Environmental Renewal & Community Partnership
Active reclamation is an essential part of modern gypsum mining, transforming extraction sites into functional landscapes that support wildlife, recreation, and community life. Across North America, Georgia-Pacific (GP) has embraced reclamation as an ongoing commitment woven into the full mining lifecycle - from early planning to post-closure stewardship. This proactive approach restores ecological integrity, strengthens relationships with local communities, and sets a model for sustainable resource use.
Land stewardship starts long before the first load of gypsum is removed. The reclamation process is integrated into mine design itself, ensuring sustainability and long-term land health. With every new mining operation, GP thinks about sustainability first, establishing both reclamation and mine-closure plans early in the process.
This forward-thinking framework helps balance the economic value of gypsum with the environmental responsibility of restoring landscapes. It also ensures compliance with regulatory bodies such as state and federal agencies and provincial authorities. Working closely with regulators, landowners, and First Nations organizations also helps ensure that reclaimed land meets or exceeds expectations for public use, ecological functionality, and community benefit for future generations.
GP's reclamation approach follows a consistent ecological structure:
This approach allows reclaimed land to heal and return to a natural-looking landscape, supporting the return of wildlife, encouraging natural water systems to re-establish, and recreating the grasslands, prairies, and wetlands that originally characterized many gypsum deposits.
One of the most successful examples of active reclamation in the gypsum industry sits in Fort Dodge, Iowa. The Gypsum City Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) Park—a stunning 800-acre recreation area with 65 miles of machine-specific trails—stands where a large gypsum mine once operated.
The park illustrates the potential for reclaimed land to support entirely new community uses. GP, in accordance with their active reclamation process, restored the landscape to pravirie and grassland and established a water source for wildlife. The partnership with the Iowa OHV Association allowed for the transformation of a mined gypsum site into one of the Midwest's premier OHV destinations. Local organizations praise the project as a model partnership that provides safe, legal trail systems for riders while preserving land integrity for future generations.
The reclamation process led to a flourishing wildlife habitat, where coyotes, beavers, bats, and migratory birds are once again thriving in the area. For local GP employees who live in Fort Dodge, this successful restoration underscores the companys values: returning land to its natural state, supporting community well-being, and proving that mining, sustainability, and recreation can coexist.