Quarry Southern Africa March 2018 | Page 16

14 _ QUARRY SA | MARCH/APRIL 2018 South African Minister of Mineral Resources, Mosebenzi Zwane, delivered the welcome address at the Mining Indaba. Olusegun Obasanjo, the former President of Nigeria and chairman of the Brenthurst Foundation, delivered a keynote address entitled ‘Partnership: A New Narrative for Africa’s Mining Industry’. production. Typically, all the assets update every 10 seconds, you can see how they move, you can fence in various areas – where they dump, where they load, what material type is associated with particular loaders, but more importantly, you can track maintenance and operational delays.” “We can also cater to most vehicles, so if every vehicle on your site has a device, why not have them on the platform. Then you've got a full GIS with your mine plan overlay, together with your drone photos. There's a lot of focus and attention on big mines, but our technology works well for the smaller quarries as well,” he added. “We have worked with one seven-ADT quarry, and they've got four managers on site, so everything’s observable, everything's managed, everything’s kind of under control. But they can't measure it because they don’t have stopwatches and eight hands the whole time. So for their R20 000 a month, they got R220 000 back just in cost savings on managing their contractors correctly. That's without considering the utilisation optimisation that we did on their load and haulers, so they're getting 10 times the system costs back every single month just by using our platform. And through increasing their communication and aligning them around the same KPIs, we dropped all their overtime hours.” This focus on the data that is currently available, and what we can do with it, carried over into other sessions, with SRK Consulting (SA) chairman William Joughin presenting a range of technological innovations developed and applied by SRK in its mining project work. Joughin highlighted the need for mines to embrace these advances as active participants in the fourth industrial revolution, and also looked at how data can form an important part of a mine’s planning. “Larger quantities of better and more reliable data – combined with specialised and in- depth engineering experience – are a real step-change in our ability to understand and manage project risk,” he said. “Today’s technology gives us the power to collect and analyse data in previously unimaginable quantities – and with remarkable benefits. We have used drones and photogrammetry, for instance, for mapping geological structures – giving us a better understanding of the geology and more reliable resource definition. This, in turn, helps mines manage geotechnical risks such as slope stability, as more data means more accurate interpretation of geological structures.” African MINING INDABA 2018 Day one of Investing in African Mining Indaba was an optimistic affair, with more delegates in attendance than in previous years.