Over the past decade, mining companies have been focused on achieving new operational efficiencies, rather than starting greenfield projects. Today priorities have changed due to increased economic activity, and mining organizations are under greater pressure to deliver on growth promises to stakeholders. This has led to an upsurge in capital investments and a greater need for effective technology planning strategies as enterprises replace legacy platforms with new platforms.
As companies begin capital projects to adopt the latest tech innovations, devising a comprehensive plan is key to unlocking the true potential of mining operations and optimizing mine production. To see benefits quickly, such as increased productivity and profit margins, a tech-planning strategy should ensure that the foundational platforms of a digital transformation are integrated upfront. Then once a mine enters the production phase, digital solutions will be in a working state and start impacting the triple bottom line of the mining company.
The typical capital project life cycle
The capital project life cycle consists of the following stages, and a technology plan should cover each one:
The challenges of mining capital projects
During the various stages of a capital project, a mining company will face a number of challenges, as described below. Having a clear understanding of these issues will help create a comprehensive tech planning strategy:
All the above impact capital project delivery, as well as the future state of mining operations and the ability to meet growth targets. Preparation for each of these challenges will help avoid making tech investments that don’t cater to the complexity of business requirements or that don’t facilitate decision making and collaboration.
An effective approach to tech planning
Since mining companies develop multiple capital projects at the same time, creating a comprehensive tech-planning strategy that covers all of them would be an effective means of ensuring capital projects deliver successful results. The suggested approach is to create a tech-planning playbook built on hybrid information (general and site-specific elements), so that it can be reused for other capital projects with modifications to any site-specific elements (such as business and IT systems).
The site-specific elements, for example, should address requirements needed at the site, such as borehole data management software during project initiation or the need for lab information management system (LIMS) software to process ore samples during, say, the pre-feasibility study. The general elements would include tools such as contractor management and procurement-capable software used during the EPC and mine development stage.
Such a playbook should contain information on standardized applications and systems and the infrastructure needed. This information would be based on a maturity assessment, gap analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and scoring criteria (alignment with business, finance, technology, and support needs). This will help an organization select the best-fit solution from the market as per business requirements. The playbook should also identify the available systems that can be leveraged and provide a roadmap for implementing future solutions. The roadmap would need to include a comprehensive tech-commercial plan with work programs such as Corporate Services, Mining Technical Systems, Site Infrastructure and Security, Environmental and Safety, and Data-Driven Operations. With the appropriate stage gates, the results would be a smooth implementation of new technologies to streamline mining operations.
The benefits of early technology planning
Technology planning for an upcoming capital project provides an opportunity to achieve benefits that improve productivity, safety, and cost by making mining operations more efficient. By conducting this planning early in the process, enterprises can utilize data generated by analyzing areas such as fleet and dispatch management, short interval control, value drivers, and performance management. The typical benefits are a reduced maintenance spend of 10 to 15%, reduced logistics costs of 10 to 20%, and productivity improvements of 10 to 20% with a positive impact on revenue and costs. The generated data can also provide a foundation for the further implementation of data-driven-platforms equipped with the latest emerging technologies, such as real-time monitoring, artificial intelligence, and machine learning.
Based on Wipro’s mining experience, the development of a capital project playbook helps avoid surprises during the operational readiness phases, and by the time the mining operations stage commences, the technologies will start providing a strong return on-investment (ROI) early in the life of the mine.
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Dharam Pratap Singh
Principal Consultant - Mining, Wipro Limited.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dharampratapsingh/
Email: dharam.pratap@wipro.com
Dharam Pratap Singh is part of Wipro's Mining Practice and focuses on digital transformation initiatives in the mining and metal industry. He has worked in geology, mining, processing plants, supply chain operations, and applications areas. He has deep experience in consulting and implementing digital solutions for ‘mining pit to port’ business processes, mining capital projects, warehouse operations, data analytics projects using mining operational data, and application management.
Sudip Chaudhuri
Global Practice Head - Mining, Wipro Limited.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sudip-chaudhuri-3808bb11/?originalSubdomain=in
Email: sudip.chaudhuri@wipro.com
Sudip Chaudhuri heads the Mining Practice for the Energy, Natural Resources, and Utilities business unit at Wipro. With over 20 years of varied information technology experience in mining and mineral processing, Sudip has worked with numerous clients in the mining and minerals industry on transformational and advisory assignments, and designing end-to-end programs. With deep domain experience across the mining and metals business, he has been able to effectively apply new technologies to bring about improvements in productivity and safety in the mining context.