Potential Role of Technology in Improving Open Cut Coal Mining Performance
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 670 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
In seeking to improve the economic performance of mines, the  management or human aspects are usually seen to be quite  seperate from, and more significant than, the technical aspects.  There are obvious aspects of industrial relations,  man-management, skills training and supervision that are  currently the focus of efforts to improve the productivity and  quality of the mining process. However technology also has a lot  to offer. Analysis of the costs involved suggests that innovations  leading to improvement in the productivity of the excavation and  transport of overburden and the recovery of coal (both in the  mine and preperation plant) can lead to improvements in the  economic performance of a mine that may outstrip the obvious  non-technical or management opportunities for improvement.  While there are some innovations currently being investigated  within the industry that relate to the design of mining equipment,  the type of machinery being used in open cut mines has not  changed dramatically over the last twenty five years. It is also  likely that mining equipment will remain essentially of the same  form in the forseeable future. If significant improvements to  mining performance are to be achieved other than by futher  increases in the scale of machinery, then we need to seek ways to  operate these same types of machines in a more productive and  controlled manner. This paper discusses the identification of mining processes the  improvement of which is likely to have a significant effect on  mining costs and performance. Some areas of current research  are discussed and potentially fruitful areas for future development  are identified.
Citation
APA: (1991) Potential Role of Technology in Improving Open Cut Coal Mining Performance
MLA: Potential Role of Technology in Improving Open Cut Coal Mining Performance. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1991.
