Practical Strata Management, Beltana No. 1 Mine, Australia

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 862 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2008
Abstract
Australia produces approximately 84 million tonnes of coal per annum from 30 longwalls in New South Wales and Queensland, operating at an average depth of around 300m. Industry trends and expectations place increasing emphasis on the reliability of these operations; for example, the current average face width is 245m and this is expected to increase to approximately 270m by 2010. In recent years, Beltana No.1 Mine has consistently been Australia?s highest longwall producer, with ROM output of 7.2Mt in YEJ2007. Strata management has become a key feature of the operation of Australia?s longwall mines, as a tool to manage variances in the geotechnical environment. This involves an understanding of the impacts of the geotechnical environment on ground behaviour and the implications for mine design, stability and associated support, interaction and horizon selection. The anticipated ground control impacts of these factors form the assumptions that drive the format of plans specifying both triggers and actions, with quantified, monitoring-focussed experience used to refine the plan in a continuous improvement (ie ?plan-do-check-act?) process. This paper summarises the Beltana No.1 Mine strata management methodology and experience to-date.
Citation
APA:
(2008) Practical Strata Management, Beltana No. 1 Mine, AustraliaMLA: Practical Strata Management, Beltana No. 1 Mine, Australia. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2008.