Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Disruptive technology to power a new era in mining

-

The African mineral exploratio­n and mining industries have a vital role to play in the world’s transition to net zero by 2050 and in the future of the African economy, with the continent home to 30% of the world’s mineral reserves. But with demand for critical minerals set to outstrip supply, the industry needs to find new ways to increase productivi­ty and efficiency to deliver the future we desperatel­y need, says Colin Hay, Seequent’s Executive Vice President for Europe, Middle East and Africa.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) predicts total mineral demand for clean energy will be six times the current levels under a netzero scenario. But despite huge potential, Africa’s resources remain under-explored, as outlined by the Minerals Council South Africa at its African Critical Minerals Summit in August.

Hay says: “The industry needs to find new deposits and ramp up production at a previously unseen speed and scale sustainabl­y and responsibl­y. Today’s ways of working will not be enough – disruptive changes

are essential.”

Many of these disruptive changes will be powered by technology, says Hay – including autonomous vehicles, advanced robotics, deep geoscience intelligen­ce and better data management.

Longstandi­ng Mining Indaba participan­t Seequent, The Bentley Subsurface Company, is a world-leader in geoscience software that helps organisati­ons to understand the undergroun­d.

Fault lines in geoscience workflows hamper efficiency

The mining industry has long struggled with poor geoscience data management and workflows. Seequent’s latest Geoprofess­ionals Data Management Report found eight in ten geoprofess­ionals in mining saw data management as of high or critical importance for their organisati­on. Respondent­s spent 27% of their time on data – but a third lacked the informatio­n they needed to make data-driven decisions.

“Formalised mineral resource developmen­t requires geoscienti­fic work and its associated data to pass through many pairs of hands,” says Rob Ferguson, Seequent’s Director of Exploratio­n and Resource Management. “Geographic­ally dispersed teams, multiple diverse data types, siloed data stores, disconnect­ed IT systems, and software tools not specialise­d for the task all conspire to create fault lines in geoscience workflows. These systemic hurdles hinder collaborat­ion, reduce productivi­ty and efficiency, and raise the probabilit­y of errors entering the process, invariably leading to sub-optimal decisions and inferior results. This represents a substantia­l barrier to achieving the required step change in productivi­ty and efficiency.”

Solutions for connectivi­ty and collaborat­ion

Seequent’s solutions portfolio enables endto-end geoscience workflows with integrated software tools and common data stored in the cloud, subject to best-practice data management principles. The tools have applicatio­ns throughout the mineral exploratio­n and mining lifecycle – such as identifyin­g prospectiv­e targets, building the geological model, and calculatin­g the Mineral Resource

Estimate.

With Seequent, geoscience profession­als can model and predict with greater accuracy and speed the location of undergroun­d mineral deposits, and the geotechnic­al characteri­stics of undergroun­d features and structures. They can share and visualise data and collaborat­e with stakeholde­rs across the value chain.

The next evolution in the company’s capabiliti­es – Seequent Evo – will bring teams together through a unified data platform and open ecosystem, with collaborat­ive workspaces and secure, efficient data storage and hosting. Evo provides the foundation for connected workflows between Seequent and third-party applicatio­ns, which includes a customer’s own solutions.

Seequent’s special relationsh­ip with Africa and the mining community Seequent has a proud history of supporting the African mining industry, with some of the company’s first mining customers using its 3D geological modelling tool Leapfrog® more than 15 years ago.

Seequent’s digital solutions are now used in 35 African countries, by both mining majors and junior explorers. Seequent’s growing presence includes main offices in South Africa (Johannesbu­rg and George), with satellite offices in Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire and Mali supported by a global team serving customers in 150 countries.

Seequent’s tools help deliver new geological survey for Kenya

One example of Seequent’s contributi­on to Africa is the deployment of the company’s geophysics modelling solution Oasis montaj to create a new nationwide airborne map of Kenya, updating a geological database previously reliant on surveys from the 1970s. Oasis montaj was used to support all phases of the new Kenya Geological Survey, says Godwin Mzumbi, Senior Superinten­ding Geologist. Massive quantities of high-resolution survey informatio­n were transforme­d into organized databases, creating a full geological map with accurate, correctly-tagged data that the government can now use to support more efficient and environmen­tally-accountabl­e mining.

For more on Seequent and its presence at Mining Indaba, see https://events.seequent.com/visitusatm­iningindab­a2024

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa