Conference Proceedings
Twelfth International Symposium on Mine Planning and Equipment Selection (MPES 2003)
Conference Proceedings
Twelfth International Symposium on Mine Planning and Equipment Selection (MPES 2003)
Practical and Strategic Technology Choices for Advanced Mining
The mining industry has come through a period of major change in community expectations regarding safety and environmental impact and these changes can be expected to continue in the future. These changes are ultimately reflected in Government regulations and industry safety standards and form the basis of the license to operate'. Equally, advances in technology have made possible new equipment and processes either available now, or close to completion, that will allow mines to meet these more stringent expectations if properly introduced. Changes in technology provide opportunities for mine management to introduce new systems that will remove people from hazardous areas and lead to improvements in the triple bottom line'. In a longer time frame of five to ten years, novel and advanced technologies that are currently being developed will deliver new mining methods and conversion of presently uneconomic resources to ore. This is consistent with the time frame required to develop a new mine from discovery. Strategic decisions can be taken now by mine designers to enable the introduction of these major technology changes. Examples of both practical and strategic opportunities are drawn from the integration of rock cutting/blasting, automation, electronic communications and new mining methods. This paper discusses emerging industry trends, changes to legislative framework and some practical choices for existing and imminent technology.
Contributor(s):
J Cunningham, I Gipps
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- Published: 2003
- PDF Size: 0.421 Mb.
- Unique ID: P200301066