Constructing, Commissioning and Operating a Mine at High Altitude - The Collahuasi Experience

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Colin Lindsay
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
13
File Size:
1985 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2001

Abstract

"The Collahuasi copper mine, located at an altitude of 4300 meters above sea level in northern Chile, commenced operations late in 1998. The mine is currently the 4‘h largest copper producer in the world and comprises an open pit, a 60,000 tpd sulphide concentrator, a 15,000 tpd oxide heap leach and SWEW plant and a 200 km concentrate pipeline to a port facility.Constructing, commissioning and operating a mine at high altitude presents unique challenges in terms of the performance of both equipment and people. It is important that these be recognized and carefully considered during the feasibility study and the detailed design stages and the success of the Collahuasi project is largely due to this. The plant design incorporates a number of features aimed at mitigating the problems of altitude and the construction methodology also took into account the particular site conditions.This paper discusses the Collahuasi project team’s approach to planning for the remote location and also some of the problems experienced during construction, commissioning and operation.INTRODUCTIONThe Collahuasi mine is located in northern Chile, some 250 km to the south-east of the port of Iquique and 15 km from the Bolivian border. The mine facilities lie between 3800-4300 m above sea level on the Altiplano, the central plateau of the Andes mountains, and cover a total of approximately 95,000 hectares. Although the area is arid, it experiences an average of 150 mm of precipitation annually and weather conditions can be extreme. Temperatures during the day range between -3 to +11 º C and are generally below 0ºC at night, sometimes as low as -20°C. High energy winds are common and humidity is low. Much of the precipitation occurs during the winter as snow but there also occurs a period during the Chilean summer known as the “Invierno Boliviano’’ (or Bolivian Winter) which is characterized by severe electrical storms and rain."
Citation

APA: Colin Lindsay  (2001)  Constructing, Commissioning and Operating a Mine at High Altitude - The Collahuasi Experience

MLA: Colin Lindsay Constructing, Commissioning and Operating a Mine at High Altitude - The Collahuasi Experience. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2001.

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