Conference Proceedings
New Leaders' 2009
Conference Proceedings
New Leaders' 2009
Mines in the Future - A Management Perspective
Mines in the future deliver a paradigm shift in the way mining, material handling and processing are performed, unlocking significant value through production efficiency, flexibility and lower costs and enabling substantial safety and environmental benefits (V Schweikart)._x000D_
Mines in the future are highly productive, with low production costs and are significantly safer. They operate with a skeleton crew and use intelligent systems that fuse information from field instrumentation and other sources to generate the most efficient operating environment._x000D_
Automated systems are seamlessly integrated across the mine and across the corporate enterprise. Geological models, long-term and short-term plans create optimised production schedules, suitably generated by the mine simulator._x000D_
Production schedules are shared with the operations management system for deployment mainly by remotely operated and autonomous equipment. As the schedule is implemented, information is collected and shared with various plans, schedules, models and optimisation programs._x000D_
This production environment is managed in real time from a Central Operations Centre' and it is visible across the business providing fast and accurate information about productivity, machine condition and environmental conditions. Central Operations Centres also house teams of subject matter experts that monitor and manage the mines and are able to communicate directly with the skeleton crew in the field. Constraints across the production line are displayed and managed appropriately from this location to maximise throughput._x000D_
Maintenance is interactive and predictive. Reliability specialists in Central Operations Centres monitor the status of machinery and equipment and adjust maintenance plans and strategies to suit._x000D_
Mining businesses rely heavily on knowledge workers - people with considerable knowledge and learning - and by manual workers. This new knowledge workforce is a team of associates rather than of bosses and subordinates. Field experts become leaders with tremendous autonomy regarding their work. The former line hierarchy becomes a support structure, intervening only in extreme emergencies; instead of giving orders, they are now removing barriers, expediting resources, conducting studies and acting as consultants._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Schweikart, V, 2009. Mines in the future - a management perspective, in Proceedings New Leaders' 2009, pp 47-50 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Mines in the future are highly productive, with low production costs and are significantly safer. They operate with a skeleton crew and use intelligent systems that fuse information from field instrumentation and other sources to generate the most efficient operating environment._x000D_
Automated systems are seamlessly integrated across the mine and across the corporate enterprise. Geological models, long-term and short-term plans create optimised production schedules, suitably generated by the mine simulator._x000D_
Production schedules are shared with the operations management system for deployment mainly by remotely operated and autonomous equipment. As the schedule is implemented, information is collected and shared with various plans, schedules, models and optimisation programs._x000D_
This production environment is managed in real time from a Central Operations Centre' and it is visible across the business providing fast and accurate information about productivity, machine condition and environmental conditions. Central Operations Centres also house teams of subject matter experts that monitor and manage the mines and are able to communicate directly with the skeleton crew in the field. Constraints across the production line are displayed and managed appropriately from this location to maximise throughput._x000D_
Maintenance is interactive and predictive. Reliability specialists in Central Operations Centres monitor the status of machinery and equipment and adjust maintenance plans and strategies to suit._x000D_
Mining businesses rely heavily on knowledge workers - people with considerable knowledge and learning - and by manual workers. This new knowledge workforce is a team of associates rather than of bosses and subordinates. Field experts become leaders with tremendous autonomy regarding their work. The former line hierarchy becomes a support structure, intervening only in extreme emergencies; instead of giving orders, they are now removing barriers, expediting resources, conducting studies and acting as consultants._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Schweikart, V, 2009. Mines in the future - a management perspective, in Proceedings New Leaders' 2009, pp 47-50 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
V Schweikart
-
Mines in the Future - A Management PerspectivePDFThis product is exclusive to Digital library subscription
-
Mines in the Future - A Management PerspectivePDFNormal price $22.00Member price from $0.00
Fees above are GST inclusive
PD Hours
Approved activity
- Published: 2009
- PDF Size: 0.062 Mb.
- Unique ID: P200904009