Geotechnical Management at the AGL Loy Yang Mine

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 7236 KB
- Publication Date:
- Nov 5, 2014
Abstract
The AGL Loy Yang Mine is one of the largest and most significant coalmines in Australia. Commencing in 1982, this mine produces 30–35 Mt/a to supply more than 50 per cent of Victoria’s electrical power requirements. At this mine there are unique geotechnical challenges to overcome to ensure its safe operation including: significant mine depth, low density of coal in the operating and permanent mine batters, the influence of groundwater and deep sediment aquifer pressures. One of the challenges is the behaviour of brown coal, which is neither a soil nor a rock and displays long-term creep stress relief. Other geotechnical challenges include ensuring stability in high unconsolidated dumps, potential large-scale block movement in mine batters driven by crack water pressure and heave from high-pressure aquifers.The paper will outline the geological and hydrogeological setting and potential failure mechanisms, and detail an integrated geographic information system and reporting regime that in part addresses ground control management at the mine. The paper will also outline the management processes for a dynamic geotechnical environment and the benefits of the alliance arrangements to meet the geotechnical requirements at the mine and the effective personnel integration in the mine technical services team.CITATION:Jansen, B, Missen, J and Cyphers, S, 2014. Geotechnical management at the AGL Loy Yang Mine, in Proceedings AusRock 2014: Third Australasian Ground Control in Mining Conference , pp 239–246 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation
APA:
(2014) Geotechnical Management at the AGL Loy Yang MineMLA: Geotechnical Management at the AGL Loy Yang Mine. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2014.