"What do Geostatistics and Cut-Off Grade Optimisation have to do with Real Options Applied to Mine Project Evaluation?"

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
O Leiva J Araya
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
13
File Size:
873 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 26, 2011

Abstract

The mine evaluation process, composed of the designing, planning and valuation of a mine project, is, among other variables, based on an estimated orebody model. However, as the information from the drill holes is limited, it is impossible to know with certainty the mineral content in each block within the estimated block model. Consequently, uncertainty about the value of metal grades, or other geological attributes, arises because of the lack of information at unsampled locations. This is one of the reasons why, in any mine operation, there will always exist a divergence between estimated and real values. Cut-off grade optimisation is the process used to determine the operating mining strategy (long-term production scheduling) that will maximise the total profit value (normally referred as the net present value (NPV)) of a mine operation. This is done by defining a dynamic cut-off grade policy which is constrained by the production capacity of the mining, mill and refining.Real options is a type of contract, written on real assets such as mining, oil and other natural resource industries, that gives you the right but not the obligation to exercise the contract. It is based on operational and managerial flexibility, which allow mine decision makers to react to either good or bad operational and economic events in the future. But, what do geostatistics and cut-off grade optimisation have to do with the application of real options in a mine project evaluation process? The objective of this paper is to answer the previous question by showing how geostatistics combined with cut-off grade optimisation are key tools for corporate/managerial decision makers, which allow them not only to analyse the resource/reserves of their projects, but also to generate operational strategies that can maximise project value by minimising the downside risk due to ore tonnes and grade uncertainties, while achieving operational and physical constraints such as mining and processing capacities. A real copper grade open pit mine project is used as a case study.
Citation

APA: O Leiva J Araya  (2011)  "What do Geostatistics and Cut-Off Grade Optimisation have to do with Real Options Applied to Mine Project Evaluation?"

MLA: O Leiva J Araya "What do Geostatistics and Cut-Off Grade Optimisation have to do with Real Options Applied to Mine Project Evaluation?". The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2011.

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