Spotlight Feature Articles COLLISION AWARENESS & AVOIDANCE | Page 3

COLLISION AWARENESS & AVOIDANCE through the ISO & ICMM (which has set a 2025 aim of making CMS available to all mining groups). The VDG plans separate testing of sensing and decision-making as well as on-site testing of underground CMS with new experimental equipment as well as multiple interactor tests and value adds to CMS (fleet management, fatigue monitoring, data analysis tools). Wabtec on regulation & its testing activity to date In an article arguing proximity detection and collision awareness technology makes for not only a safer, but more productive mine, Craig Hoffmann, Senior Product Manager – Collision Awareness & Geospatial Systems at Wabtec Corp’s Digital Mine division, has revealed that the company is currently working on conducting single and multiple machine testing on a production mine site using its collision awareness system. In an opinion piece titled, Pioneering collision awareness technology enables safer mining practices, Hoffman gives a good account of the history of this technology, as well as the milestones the Wabtec team have achieved. Mining has always been seen as a risky business, whether undertaken above ground or deep beneath the earth’s surface. But, thanks to a combination of government regulation in South Africa and a concerted industry effort by mining companies and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), further enabled by Paul Moore spoke to Fabien Kritter, Product Manager, Autonomous & Marcos Bayuelo, Product Manager, Safety at Hexagon Mining Q It’s been a while since the stories came out about your VIS Level 9 CAS system being used at Sishen. Are there any updates on VIS, where else it has been tested, results achieved and to what extent it is being implemented fleet wide at any sites? FK: We have achieved full operation at Sishen mine on more than 100 haul trucks, which have been running with the system activated for more than a year without impacting production. The system has compelled some operators to be more vigilant and to follow the rules. We do have other deployments lining up in South Africa, but also in other countries where mining houses see a lot of benefit to the system. Aside from equipping haul trucks, VIS has also been adapted to ADTs and loaders. Q What are the current legislative requirements for CAS in the main mining markets? Am I right in thinking South Africa is leading the way? FK: There are various initiatives, but first let’s clarify the definitions. For many years, South Africa has led and pushed mine safety boundaries. But there was no coordination among industry members. In this regard, EMESRT has done great work gathering people from different OEMs and PDS (proximity detection suppliers) around the table to define and communicate a standard machine for the industry. This standard has now been broadened to an ISO standard. ICMM is leveraging the EMESRT work at larger specifications and across a broader audience. But yes, at the moment, only South Africa has regulated. Many other countries are looking closely at what is happening there. MB: ICMM and EMESRT are doing a great job trying to regulate and coordinate the industry. Machinery OEMs and technology providers are moving towards a more holistic understanding and approach to vehicle interactions and engineering controls. This is resulting in a more coordinated understanding of the risks and how technology can help; and the success criteria for technology to minimise risks in the different control levels. There is still no sign of legislative requirements in the short term. However, we expect tighter regulations and higher safety expectations from regional regulatory bodies and markets in the coming years. Legislative requirements in mines exposed to a high risk would require engineering controls as collision avoidance, fatigue monitoring and pedestrian-detection technologies would be enforced. Hexagon is working with major OEMs and mining companies to ensure a proper solution is available to cover their needs and minimise their specific risks with different features/benefits and price tags. The third key milestone that the Wabtec team is currently working towards for Level 9 CAS is to conduct single and multiple machine testing on a production minesite. It already has Level 8 systems at Telfer, Lihir and elsewhere cutting-edge technology, it’s becoming a lot safer, he writes, as detailed elsewhere in some depth in this report. In several respects, South Africa is leading the way in this drive towards the ideal of a mining industry with zero avoidable fatalities. Collision awareness is a crucial component of this quest, contributing to the layers of protection against significant risk associated with vehicle interactions. “A collision awareness system (CAS) is an integral part of mine safety management tools that helps workers make the right decision at the right time in order to mitigate vehicle interaction risk while helping to increase productivity and improve situational awareness. The need for a CAS in South Africa was identified as far back as 1995, when the Leon Commission of Inquiry into Safety and Health in the Mining Industry identified haulage and transport accidents as the second largest category of accidents in mines. The government wasn’t slow to respond. A year later, the Mine Health and Safety Act was enacted, which places the responsibility on employers to ensure mines are safe and workplaces healthy.” “At the same time internationally, there was a concerted move towards making interactions between vehicles, vehicles-to-persons and vehicles-to-environment significantly safer. The Earth Moving Equipment Safety Round Table (EMESRT) was established in 2006 by six global mining companies. From the outset, engagement with OEMs was seen as crucial to the success of its efforts. Since its formation, EMESRT, as part of the Vehicle Interaction Systems Performance Requirements PR-5A, has defined 24 surface vehicle interaction scenarios and established nine levels of vehicle interaction defensive controls, namely: Level 1 – site requirements, Level 2 – segregation controls, Level 3 – operating procedures, Level 4 – authority to JANUARY 2020 | International Mining