How to Evaluate and Reduce the Mining Rate Risk

How to Evaluate and Reduce the Mining Rate Risk

 

Economies of scale operate well in the mining industry: a big mine will produce significantly more output per unit of input than will a small mine. But not all orebodies can support a big mine.

The mining engineer has to match each orebody with an appropriate mining rate. Not uncommonly, he or she is forced to conclude that mining can only realistically occur at some fraction of the maximum rate because of the awkward shape of the deposit.

In the case of an ore deposit that is oriented more or less vertically, there is a good rule-of-thumb that can be used for selecting mining rates: the daily tonnage rate should be about 15% of the number of tonnes indicated or developed per vertical meter of depth. If, for example, the exploration program has proved up 6,500 tonnes (7,200 tons) of ore per vertical meter to some reasonable depth, a daily rate of 1,000 tonnes (1,100 tons) could, be justified

The width of an orebody will have a direct bearing on production rates as well. Ore in wide orebodies can be mined and handled much less expensively per tonne than can ore in narrow occurrences.

 

Rate of production is also related to the ores availability for extraction, because most mining methods require that the miner leave behind some ore in pillars to support the structure of the mine. It may be some time before this ore becomes available for stoping, and some of it may have to be left behind altogether.

Risk of Dilution: In some mines, the physical characteristics of the wallrock may force a company to mine a considerable amount of unwanted, barren rock along with the ore. This waste rock must then be transported to surface with the ore, so naturally, such dilution of the ore costs the mining company money. In some cases, dilution can reach as high as 20% of what is mined, making the mine far less profitable than it could have been had the mining engineer been able to devise a method of mining only the mineralized rock.

 

Prospecting &  Mining Basics How to Evaluate and Reduce the Metallurgical Risk of Mining Projects
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