The Dirt on Mining Information

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Michael W. Russnak
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
684 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2007

Abstract

Productivity and operating expenses are everything when it comes to judging how well your mine and company are doing. Stakeholders are always looking at these numbers and trying to understand if productivity is improving, if operating costs are trending downward and what you are basing your decisions on. o make improvements you first need to understand how you are performing. If you can?t get this basic information, you will never improve. You will not be able to make simple decisions related to maintenance, operations or production. Forget about planning, as you will only be guessing based on the numbers some stakeholder or your executive wants to see. The problem miners run into is not that the data doesn?t exist; it does, but typically it?s raw, it?s everywhere and its volume is huge. Today there is more on-board computing capability in shovels than we had on our desktops three years ago. Add other mobile equipment, plant systems and multiple OEM vendors to the equation and the challenge is daunting.
Citation

APA: Michael W. Russnak  (2007)  The Dirt on Mining Information

MLA: Michael W. Russnak The Dirt on Mining Information. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.

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