‘Future mine’ research [South Africa] needs to begin now – Wits – by Martin Creamer (MiningWeekly.com – March 13, 2014)

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JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – Research into South Africa’s ‘mine of the future’ needs to begin immediately, says University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) School of Mining Engineering head Fred Cawood.

The programme for the mine of the future needs to be broken into various phases, with the immediate goal being to mine more for less in order to provide cash flow for more intensive research.

The underground mining environment needs to be better understood and technology already widely used on surface, including satellite technology, needs to be migrated underground.

For that purpose, a digital mine mock-up is being established at the Wits School of Mining Engineering to assure safety and generate the cash for more profound longer-term research. Cawood’s view is that mechanisation should follow optimisation and be accompanied by the introduction of a new mining layout.

But he sees the phase of optimisation, mechanisation and new layout as an interim measure that needs to be replaced over time by the entirely new mine design.

And that research, in his view, needs to begin right away.

In the last ten years, Wits has established the Centre for Sustainability in Mining, the Centre for Mechanised Mining Systems, the Wits Mining Research Institute (WMRI) and is busy establishing a digital mine beneath the School of Mining Engineering.

WMRI, kicked off by Minerals Minister Susan Shabangu 18 months ago, turned out to be bigger than the university expected, which has resulted in it stalling.

However, new vice-chancellor Professor Adam Habib committed to a decision on the institute in early 2014.

“We’re expecting a discussion at this week’s Senate meeting,” Cawood tells Mining Weekly Online in the attached video interview.

Pretoria University also has promising research initiatives under way and the State’s Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) is conducting research, including laser research, which is expected to be adapted and used in underground mining.

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