Downstream impacts of Grade Engineering and preconcentration

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 915 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 10, 2020
Abstract
In addition to volatile commodity prices influencing decision making, in recent years, social and
environmental performance have become important decision drivers within the mining industry.
There are increased demands from stakeholders, communities, and governments to ensure that raw
materials are mined, processed and refined responsibly. The industry also faces the challenge of
better managing its waste, which has led to severe consequences when not done properly.
The high commodity prices of the late 90s and early 2000s encouraged larger economies of scale
and drove mining companies to extract large volumes of rock for separation and concentration at the
downstream processes. Over time, as ore grades dropped, the cost of mining escalated and tailings
volumes grew. This arduous process also caused strains on recovery cost and performance. Scarcity
of water and energy resources coupled with increased production demands and higher operating
costs are putting pressure on companies to find innovative ways to increase mining intensities.
Hatch’s value chain optimisation methodologies, specifically Grade Engineering® and early waste
rejection of the mine, have been of interest to intensify operational performance and minimise waste
generation. Enabling preconcentration of the plant throughput, the methodology has significant
potential to improve overall metal production and reduce water and energy intensities, whilst
minimising wet tailings. Using representative data from real world mines, this paper reports on a
case study that evaluates the impact of preconcentration using sensor-based ore sorting on
downstream process improvements as well as energy, water and tailings reduction. Financial and
economic viability of this technique is presented for both brownfield and greenfield implementation
cases. The results show that business case for preconcentration is best when: the distribution of
metal in the run of mine ore is negatively skewed and left tailed; mining costs are low; energy, water
and tailings management costs are high; and low cost methods of recovering pay metal from low
grade material are available.
Citation
APA:
(2020) Downstream impacts of Grade Engineering and preconcentrationMLA: Downstream impacts of Grade Engineering and preconcentration. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2020.