Risk Assessment Of Geotechnical Factors Associated With Underground Thick Seam Mining Methods

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 2036 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2001
Abstract
Australia is well endowed with extensive reserves of thick underground coal scams, particularly in the range of 4.5m to 9m thicknesses. (For the purposes of this paper, thick scams are defined as being greater than 4.5m thick.) At the present time, the thickest, high production, high productivity underground mining operation in Australia operates at a maximum of approximately 4.8m using single pass longwall methods. In a number of instances, conventional' height operations are mining thick seam coal, effectively sterilising considerable reserves - either because of financial or technical risk concerns, or in some cases poorer quality coal at some horizons in the scam, UNSW has been involved in thick scam mining research over many years, most recently through an ACARP -funded project, jointly with the CMTE in Australia. A key part of that project involved the assessment of the relative geotechnical risks associated with the various methods under consideration. The methods were: single pass longwall; multi-slice descending longwall; soutirage and related caving methods (including the Chinese Longwall Top Coal Caving method (LTCC)): and hydraulic mining. A formal risk assessment process was adopted to review the risks, relative to a conventional 4m high longwall operation. This paper presents the findings of that risk review and discusses the geotechnical issues (and some possible solutions for risk management) which need to be dealt with in order to bring these methods to fruition in the context of the Australian coal industry environment.
Citation
APA:
(2001) Risk Assessment Of Geotechnical Factors Associated With Underground Thick Seam Mining MethodsMLA: Risk Assessment Of Geotechnical Factors Associated With Underground Thick Seam Mining Methods. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2001.