Mining Geotechnical Benchmarking

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Vincent A. Scovazzo
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
4
File Size:
1263 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

Benchmarking is a business management process that seeks improvement through the study and reapplication of practices conducted by industry leaders. This discussion presents objectives and organization of benchmarking applied to mining geomechanics. Similar procedures have been successfully applied to mining companies, laboratories, and research organizations involved in mining geomechanics throughout the world. Benchmarking is a structured process that allows an organization to learn from the "best" in the field. The objectives of benchmarking vary depending on the company's targeted areas for improvements. Typical goals include ground control cost reduction, enhanced safety, optimization of geotechnical staffing, development of state-of-the-art design procedures, or the adoption of the "best in the field" geotechnical data management. Once the objective of the study is established and the practices and procedures to be benchmarked are identified, a benchmarking team is formed from internal and outside specialists. Benchmarking in geomechanics is fundamentally different than in most other fields because of the effects of local geologic conditions and regulations, both of which must be understood by all on the benchmarking team, before a comparative analysis can be made.
Citation

APA: Vincent A. Scovazzo  (2000)  Mining Geotechnical Benchmarking

MLA: Vincent A. Scovazzo Mining Geotechnical Benchmarking. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2000.

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