It should go without saying that all mineral processors should be interested in the mineralogy of their ore because mineralogy directly controls how the ore behaves during processing. The type of minerals present, their grain size, associations, and degree of liberation determine the choice and efficiency of comminution, separation, and extraction methods. Mineralogy influences recovery, concentrate grade, reagent consumption, energy use, and the generation of deleterious elements or penalties. A sound understanding of ore mineralogy allows processors to predict processing challenges, optimise plant design and operating conditions, and respond effectively to ore variability, ultimately improving metallurgical performance and economic outcomes.
MEI’s Process Mineralogy ’26 is important because it brings together mineral processors, mineralogists, researchers, and equipment suppliers to focus on the critical link between ore mineralogy and processing performance. The conference provides a platform to share the latest advances in process mineralogy tools, techniques, and case studies that demonstrate how detailed mineralogical understanding can solve real plant problems. By highlighting how mineralogy influences recovery, efficiency, sustainability, and risk management across the mining value chain, the conference helps bridge the gap between geology and metallurgy, supports better decision-making, and promotes more efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally responsible mineral processing operations.
Process Mineralogy ’26 is relevant to a wide range of professionals who are involved in, or influenced by, ore characterisation and processing, including:
- Mineral processing engineers and metallurgists seeking to improve recovery, grade, and plant performance.
- Process mineralogists and geometallurgists working to link mineralogical data with processing behaviour.
- Geologists and exploration professionals interested in understanding how ore characteristics affect downstream processing and project value.
- Plant operators and technical managers responsible for managing ore variability and operational risk.
- Researchers, academics, and students focused on mineral processing, mineralogy, and related disciplines.
- Equipment manufacturers and technology providers offering analytical tools, software, and processing solutions.
- Consultants and project developers involved in flowsheet design, feasibility studies, and optimisation
Process Mineralogy '26 is followed by Critical Minerals '26 and there is likely to be a fair amount of overlap between the two conferences. One of the keynotes at Process Mineralogy '26 will deal with process mineralogy for critical metals in mineral processing and extractive metallurgy and the two conferences have an advisor in common, Prof Alan R. Butcher of ButcherGeologica.



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