Mining Mirror July 2019 | Page 39

Cradle to grave A new mobile water station has been developed to provide safe drinking water for remote workforces in the mining industry. “Hydration stations from Bluewater offer tangible benefits to mining operators where providing drinking water can be logistically challenging and costly,” says James Steere, Bluewater Africa Operations Director. Andrew Cooper, MD of FreshCamp Services, has 20 years of experience in logistics, site mobilisation and day-to-day contractor village management, and says that provision of clean drinking water can account for as much as 10% of the catering costs for mining operations. “Basically, the more remote you are, the more complicated delivering clean water becomes. There are places where even treated water may be unsuitable for drinking. In some cases, water is transported in tanked vehicles from site to site, transferred at each site to an overhead tank, then reverse osmosis (RO) treated again before being fed into the camp water system. It’s all highly inefficient,” says Cooper. Bluewater has been piloting its mobile water trailer and an add-on micro water purification plant since late 2018. A single Bluewater Trailer can purify and dispense up to 2 000 litres of drinking water on site per day from Solutions for rehabilitation The FLSmidth EcoTails tailings solution is a game changing opportunity for the mining sector. most water sources. The trailer’s compact design enables multiple water points to be established around an operating site and the mobility allows for on or offsite centralised water purification. Where multiple trailers are required, Bluewater has developed a small treatment plant at which trailers can refill before delivery to teams, effectively creating a highly efficient hub-and-spoke treatment and delivery process. The treatment plant uses a patented SuperiorOsmosis purification technology and requires a 5m x 5m area to set up and operate. It can even generate safe drinking water from normally tough-to-purify brackish or borehole water. The 3m-long Bluewater Trailer also uses Bluewater technology to further purify the water and offers chilled and sparkling water from multiple dispenser points mounted into the sides of each trailer. based approach, as opposed to a loading time-based approach, since the latter is based on theoretical total time and is more likely to give an inaccurate reflection of actual production capacity. With a calendar time-based OEE analysis, then, several additional factors affecting productivity are taken into account namely: • Unscheduled downtime (breakdowns/ failures); • Scheduled and unscheduled maintenance; • Idle time (e.g., operator lunch breaks); • Waiting time (e.g., when a shovel waits for a truck to be loaded/unloaded); • Inactivity during moves between sites; and • Environmental disruptions (e.g. unsuitable terrain, etc.). Hitachi Construction Machinery supplies one third of all the hydraulic mining excavators in the world. According to the company the modular designs employed in the newer technology Hitachi machines make for timeous and effortless maintenance routines, which play a significant role in production optimisation. Better horsepower output, efficient engines, ergonomically designed cabs, advanced hydraulics, tough frames, and powerful arm- and bucket-digging forces improve the robustness of the machines, which maximises production time to get the job done. This also makes for lower total cost of ownership, as the customer benefits from additional value over time. For example, a renowned mining customer has reported seeing extended life on main components purchased with the equipment such as the rigid dump truck wheel units, on which they have achieved in excess of 25 000 hours through the application of maintenance tactics in partnership with Hitachi’s site support personnel. With a very closely managed and monitored maintenance plan they aim to manage these components to 50 000 hours. Benchmarking reliability The South African mining industry has performed poorly over the past 10 years, with its contribution to the national GDP having halved since 1994. Year-on- year production fell by 3.3% in January, according to Statistics South Africa, with downtime, power outages and uncertainty around regulatory policies hampering production. Addressing the major constraints impeding the sector’s growth and development could result in annual expansion of between 3% and 4% up to the year 2020, and the creation of thousands of jobs and greater potential investor interest. One of the major contributors to losses in productivity and profit is downtime, and on the surface this is attributed either to maintenance or mechanical failure, with these alone having a significant impact on production and profitability. However, a deeper look into the actual typical operating conditions in the mining environment reveals that there are levels of downtime beyond these two. A closer approximation of actual production time can be reached by applying an OEE (Overall Equipment Efficiency) analysis on a calendar time- www.miningmirror.co.za From this, it is clear that the true cost of downtime is notably higher in reality than in theory, and since many of these factors are beyond the control of managers and personnel, it clearly illustrates the importance of quality and reliability of the equipment itself to the overall viability of a mining enterprise. JULY 2019 MINING MIRROR [37]