The Impact of Operating Cost on Life-of-Mine Costs of Hydrometallurgy Facilities

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. R. Porter C. Panaou
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
388 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

"A significant effort is expended on preparation of the capital estimate for feasibility studies. The development of the operating cost estimate is usually allocated a significantly smaller budget and less emphasis is placed on ensuring the accuracy of the operating cost. This paper presents a comparison of capital and operating costs of hydrometallurgy processing plants in order to demonstrate the importance that variations in operating costs have on the overall life-of-mine costs. The analysis is supported by a case study on the operating costs of a water treatment plant at an existing Australian hydrometallurgy facility at the feasibility design level. INTRODUCTIONDetermination of the economic validity of a minerals processing project is a critical outcome of a feasibility study. In many cases, the financial results of the feasibility study will determine if the project should proceed to execution. Ensuring that these results are reliable and built upon sound engineering practices allows companies to make informed decisions on resource opportunities and the selected technology.The methodology for developing a capital cost estimate at the feasibility level is well established. Specialist engineering estimators use budget quotations, first principle estimation and rules-of-thumb to develop an estimate with an accuracy of typically -10% to +15%. Cost reporting software packages are used to methodically build up the estimate from design information supplied by the engineering disciplines. Risk analysis and capital expense workshops are carried out to identify potential deficiencies in the estimate. It is widely recognized that in order to successfully produce a feasibility level capital estimate with an appropriate level of accuracy, a rigorous development process is necessary.The development of the operating cost estimate is typically less rigorous than the capital cost estimate. The operating cost is normally derived by the process engineering discipline and rarely are specialist estimators used to support the development. The allocated budget for producing an operating cost is usually smaller and less emphasis is placed on ensuring the accuracy and contingency reflect the most likely operating cost scenario."
Citation

APA: J. R. Porter C. Panaou  (2012)  The Impact of Operating Cost on Life-of-Mine Costs of Hydrometallurgy Facilities

MLA: J. R. Porter C. Panaou The Impact of Operating Cost on Life-of-Mine Costs of Hydrometallurgy Facilities. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2012.

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