IM 2020 April 20 | Page 14

COMMINUTION & CRUSHING also felt the pressure to come up with more environmentally friendly equipment, responding with ambitious programs of their own to tackle climate change. FLSmidth, in November, launched its new MissionZero sustainability program at its Capital Markets Day aimed at significantly reducing emissions across the global cement and mining industries by 2030, while Metso recently had its greenhouse gas (GHG) emission targets approved by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi). These targets include reducing Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions by 25% by 2030 and cutting transport emissions by 20% by 2025. Outotec’s own targets – reducing the absolute Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions of its own operations by 13% as well as Scope 3 emissions by 10% by 2025, compared with its 2017 base year – were validated by the SBTi in early 2019. These initiatives come on top of Weir Group, the parent company of Weir Minerals, launching a sustainability strategy that would enable net zero carbon dioxide emissions in mining through supporting the industry’s technology transformation and halving its own CO 2 emissions by 2030. The likes of Rio Tinto, BHP, Anglo American and others have also made significant commitments to investors to cut their GHG footprints. Leading from the front While these mining companies are clearly prioritising their environmental, social and governance initiatives when evaluating their operations, this philosophy is not evident across the entire sector. When asked whether he had seen energy efficiency move up the list of priorities for mining companies assessing their comminution requirements, Alan Boylston, Director, Process Engineering Development, at Metso, said: “It depends. It’s not necessarily just about the orebody, it is about the owner too.” Speaking to IM on the side lines of the recent SME MineXchange Expo and Conference, in Phoenix, Arizona, he continued: “If we’re talking about an owner that has access to a lot of capital – the majors or a mining company with government backing – then that focus is a real thing. “Often, however, increased energy efficiency and capital costs are at odds with each other. If you are a mid-cap or junior miner and you are faced with the prospect of having to pay so many million more to put in this energy efficient equipment, they quite often say, ‘that would be nice, but we don’t have the money right now’.” Boylston says there are cases where, if mining companies approach the OEM early enough in the design phase, it can design scenarios where the capital cost is comparable or even less for an 12 International Mining | APRIL 2020 thyssenkrupp installed 12 HPGRs and 10 large ball mills at Freeport McMoRan’s Cerro Verde mine energy-efficient design than a conventional flowsheet but, again, it depends on the project in question. “One example we’ve looked at recently is a large mine site where they were going to go with a HPGR to ball mill type design, except that the ball mills were going to be large enough to require gearless motor drives – which can be very expensive,” Boylston said. “In this particular case, we suggested an HPGR, to a ball mill, to a Vertimill; so a third grinding stage. This allowed us to go with a smaller ball mill with dual pinion drives and then finish up the grinding in a more efficient Vertimill – reducing your energy and media consumption substantially. So, there were opex benefits to the energy efficient design and the capex – as you were getting rid of the GMDs – was comparable with the original design.” Such examples prove illustrative for mining companies on the lookout for energy efficient comminution options, but Boylston believes the take up of such technology would benefit from wider industry acknowledgement of the potential carbon footprint improvements they offer. “With, for example, a Vertimill, when you are talking about tertiary grind or re-grind applications, these machines are much more efficient than ball mills in the range of 30-50% when it comes to power, which is directly related to greenhouse gases,” he said. Vertimills also use a lot less media – in the order of about half the media a ball mill does, according to Boylston. “That is intrinsic, or embedded, CO 2 from having to make that steel media and transport it to site. “When you start adding all of those things together, if greenhouse gas load or carbon footprint is something that starts to become tradeable, all of these technologies that on the surface add a little bit of capital cost can be paid back with real dollar savings in media and power, and also the credits from any greenhouse gas abatements.” Should such a situation arise, certain ‘alternative’ technologies are in line for extra credit. Learning from other industries More than three decades have passed since the introduction of HPGRs, yet this crushing tool is still to achieve the widespread adoption many assumed would occur upon its release. Originally implemented in the cement industry in 1985, it later found a home in the circuits of diamond and iron ore operations. It took until 2006 for a HPGR to be installed in a copper processing circuit – the Freeport McMoRan-owned Cerro Verde mine, in Peru – and has taken even longer to filter down to precious metals mining. As recently as September 2019, Coeur Mining told investors during a site visit, “HPGR technology is relatively new to precious metals mining, although it has been proven in processing other materials”. In reviewing a newly commissioned comminution circuit at the Rochester mine, in Nevada, USA – a thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions HPGR – the company said it expected a boost in both silver recoveries and lower operating costs by applying the technology at the mine. The precious metals miner’s HPGR order comes on top of an unnamed Middle East gold mine selecting Weir Minerals’ Enduron ® HPGR for its own asset. Weir claimed the HPGR could provide the operation with a potential energy saving of 22% and a more than 25% increase in throughput. And, close by in Turkey, Eldorado Gold recently said it will replace the tertiary crushing circuit at its Kisladag mine with a HPGR circuit as it looks to extend the mine life and improve gold recoveries at the heap leach operation.