Thursday, 9 July 2026

Process Mineralogy '26: programme now available

Monday's posting contained memories of Automated Mineralogy '06 in Brisbane, the first of three annual conferences held in Brisbane, before evolving into Process Mineralogy '10 in Cape Town. 

The process mineralogy series proved very successful and the 8th in the series will be held in Cape Town in November.

The full programme for Process Mineralogy '26, including abstracts and details of the presenters, can be found on the conference website, and a pdf of the timetable is also available.  

Over 40 presentation are scheduled over the three days, including two keynote lectures from Tassos Grammatikopoulos, of SGS Natural Resources, Canada and Lucas Pereira, of the Helmholtz Institute Freiberg for Resource Technology, Germany.

As with all MEI Conferences, time has been made available for networking. The long coffee and lunch breaks will be held in the exhibition area, and there is one exhibit booth still available for rental.

Lunch in the exhibition area at Process Mineralogy '24

The late afternoon sundowner will be held in the Vineyard Hotel gardens and the conference dinner at nearby Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, both great locations with a background of Table Mountain.

Sundowner at Process Mineralogy '24

Process Mineralogy '14 at Kirstenbosch

We thank our sponsors, Promet101, Hitachi, Capstone Copper, AECI Mining Chemicals, Petrolab and ZEISS  and our media sponsors International Mining and Minerals Engineering.

We look forward to seeing you at Process Mineralogy '26 and to Critical Minerals '26 which immediately follows. This video of Process Mineralogy '14 will show you what to expect if this is your first time at an MEI Conference in Cape Town.

#ProcessMineralogy26
#CriticalMinerals26
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Monday, 6 July 2026

Memories of Automated Mineralogy '06, Brisbane

Twenty years ago this month the Hilton Hotel, Brisbane, Australia was the venue for MEI's inaugural Automated Mineralogy '06, a follow up to Applied Mineralogy '03 in Helsinki three years earlier. Organised in collaboration with Intellection with media partner the Gold & Minerals Gazette, this was the first of three annual conferences held in Brisbane, before evolving into Process Mineralogy '10 in Cape Town. 

Automated Mineralogy '06 brought together professionals concerned with the analysis and interpretation of mineralogical data using automated techniques, as well those involved with the development of hardware and software solutions to aid automated mineralogical analysis. The meeting attracted a wide spectrum of attendees including mineralogists, geologists, microscopists, process and mining engineers, analysts, business managers, and consultants. A total of 90 delegates representing nine countries attended the two-day conference at which 27 technical presentations plus exhibits from a number of key institutions and equipment suppliers, kept delegates informed. A full report was kindly supplied by Mark Pownceby, of CSIRO Minerals and selected papers were published in Volume 16 Issue 11 of Minerals Engineering.

A few surviving photos from the event are shown below:

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Thursday, 2 July 2026

Critical Minerals '26 programme now available

We are pleased to announce an outstanding programme for Critical Minerals '26 in Cape Town. The full programme, including abstracts and details of the presenters can be found on the conference website, and a pdf of the timetable is also available.

Thirty-nine presentations are scheduled over the two days, including two high-profile keynotes from Prof. Jacques Eksteen and Prof. Chun-Xia Zhao, the response being such that we have closed abstract submission, any abstracts now being received being put on a waiting list.

As with all MEI Conferences, time will also be given for socialising and networking, including welcoming and closing receptions and an informal conference dinner at the nearby Wild Fig restaurant, which impressed us at the recent Mineral Processing Circuits '26.

Dinner pre-drinks at the Wild Fig restaurant at Mineral Processing Circuits '26

There will be a very small exhibition at the conference, and one booth is currently available.  

Thanks to our sponsors Promet101, Capstone Copper, Petrolab and AECI Mining Chemicals, our media partners International Mining and Minerals Engineering and our industry advocate CEEC: Coalition for Minerals Efficiency.

#Critical Minerals26
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Monday, 29 June 2026

June summary- dynamic Falmouth, birthday milestones and sad news from Germany

The month of May ended with a heatwave with unusually high temperatures down here in Cornwall, but the first two weeks of June were unusually cold and wet. The dismal weather continued to the middle of the month, when the annual UK Mining Conference in Cornwall was held in Falmouth. With a record attendance of 480 delegates it was good to catch up with familiar faces from as far away as Australia.

With Australian delegates Nigel Grigg and Ben Wraith, of Gekko Systems

And congratulations to Prof. Frances Wall, of Camborne School of Mines, who received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the conference dinner.  Frances was a keynote lecturer at MEI's Process Mineralogy '18 in Cape Town.

Frances Wall (left) in Cape Town, 2018

There's always something going on in Falmouth, Cornwall's jewel in the crown, and the weekend after the conference crowds flocked into the town for the annual Sea Shanty Festival. It takes over Falmouth every June, filling pubs, quaysides, beer gardens, streets and waterfront stages with traditional maritime songs, folk music and huge crowd singalongs. There were pirates everywhere!

Also in the middle of the month we announced a keynote lecture for next year's Hydrometallurgy '27. Dr. Kathy Sole will highlight the Nchanga Tailings Leach-Solvent Extraction-Electrowinning process, showing how this elegant process conforms to the principles for a circular hydrometallurgy circuit and can be considered to have been ahead of its time with respect to these ideas. Today, some 20% of world primary copper cathode is produced using this technology, with the dominant contribution coming from the African Copper Belt, so those who undertook the bold decision to develop this technology can hold their heads up high.

It is now over half a century since the development and construction of the massive plant on the Zambian Copperbelt, and only a few of the members of the team are still alive, but I was pleased to hear from the survivors shortly after my posting of 8th June

Ken Severs said that he was a minor contributor to the plant, his association with it being merely the months before he was, in October 1970, transferred to the newly-established Zambian Engineering Unit in Ashford, England. but in January 1971 he worked with Les Stewart in Arizona, using the Bagdad commercial plant as an experimental test facility for the tailings leach plant.

Les Stewart, who now lives in Alderney in the Channel Islands, emailed to say that being Tailings Leach Superintendent was an exciting start to his career, much of which he owes to Jack Holmes, who led the project.

Paul Smithson, who is now retired in Malta, emailed to wish all the best to the remaining Nchanga hands. Paul was involved with the high grade leach plant when I was transferred there briefly in 1973, prior to my departure from Zambia.  As was Willem Duyvestyn, who became a member of the tailings leach project. Willem is now semi-retired in Colorado, developing novel technologies for various critical metals including a novel chalcopyrite leaching technology.

The man who will forever be associated with the project and who made the final recommendation for the go-ahead, is Jack Holmes. He and his wife live in Somerset West, just 35 miles from Cape Town and despite being in his mid-90s he is planning to attend Hydrometallurgy '27 next year to hear Kathy's keynote. 

We celebrated two special birthdays this month. Very best wishes from all the family to Jon, who reached the milestone of his 50th birthday on the 17th. 

A week later, the legendary flotation scientist Prof. Graeme Jameson celebrated his 90th birthday. Congratulations, Graeme, from all of us at MEI, on this remarkable occasion. Your contributions to the minerals industry have left an enduring legacy, and it has been a privilege for so many of us to know and work with you over the years. 

We hope that Graeme will be able to join us at Flotation '27 in Cape Town next year, as, although he formally retired at the end of 2022, he and his small research team are working on two long-term projects. In the first, making use of a new way of improving the flotation kinetics and ultimate recovery of floatable particles and in the second aiming to reduce the size of flotation cells significantly, to reduce footprint and volume, hopefully by an order of magnitude.

I will always treasure the photograph taken at Flotation '25 of Graeme and me with our grandsons, Sam and Will. A wonderful memory of a very special occasion, where we celebrated my 80th birthday!

Graeme and me with grandsons Will and Sam

In the photo below, taken nine years ago at the SME Annual Meeting in Denver, Graeme is with Dr. Hanna Horsch, who was then with Hazen Research, Colorado.  Yesterday I was shocked and saddened to hear that Hanna died eight days ago in Germany.

Hanna was a lovely person and an exceptional mineralogist with over 25 years' experience in academia, industry and research organisations, mainly in the fields of applied and instrumental mineralogy.  She had many years experience with Anglo American Research Labs, then Intellection, FEI, Hazen Research, Inc. and SGS. She was a contributor to six MEI Conferences, in automated mineralogy, process mineralogy and flotation and we would catch up regularly at SME Annual Meetings. Our thoughts are with Hanna's family and ex-colleagues.

And finally,  just as the month of May ended with a heatwave, a record-breaking heatwave hit Europe and the UK at the end of this month, with parts of southern England facing temperatures in the high 30s C.  This month's heatwave was hotter in peak temperature, more humid, and more disruptive than that in May. Although May in Falmouth felt like a brilliant early summer spell, last week felt more like proper heatwave conditions, but the sea stopped it becoming as extreme as much of southern England.

The sea is the place to be at 31C: Falmouth's Swanpool beach

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Thursday, 25 June 2026

Memories of Hydrocyclones '06, Falmouth

Hydrocyclones '06 was MEI's 2nd international symposium on hydrocyclones and was sponsored by Krebs Engineers.

Held over two days, 20 years ago this month, it immediately followed Ultrafine Grinding '06 at the Falmouth Beach Resort Hotel.

Fifteen papers were presented and selected papers were published in Volume 20 Issue 4 (2007) of Minerals Engineering.

Photos from the event are shown below:

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Monday, 22 June 2026

The Journey to Circuit Optimisation Starts with the Small Stuff

In comminution circuit design and optimisation, emphasis is often placed on the shiny, bright lights of innovation, equipment selection and flowsheet configuration. In a keynote lecture at Comminution '27, Dr. Richard (Ted) Bearman, of Bear Rock Solutions, Australia, will argue that small stuff is frequently dismissed but cumulatively can create significant losses in throughput, equipment availability and product quality. Beyond that there are also concomitant effects on power and circuit effectiveness, which may lessen the original benefits and dim the brighter future being pursued.

Ted will examine these "micro-losses" within crushing and grinding circuits, drawing on site-based experience and assessments across multiple operations. To illustrate the points, specific operational cases will be provided to show what can happen, why it occurred and steps to avoid such situations. By sweating the "Small Stuff", through timely identification of issues, focused attention and systematic operational analysis, the aim is to demonstrate that substantial improvements in comminution circuit performance can be achieved. 

Richard (Ted) Bearman, holds a B.Eng and PhD from the Camborne School of Mines, UK, and has been working in comminution and technology for 39 years.  He has worked for equipment suppliers, research organisations and mining companies and since 2009 has operated the Bear Rock Solutions consulting business.  Dr. Bearman has a focus on technology, comminution, systems optimisation, simulation and effectiveness of resource recovery, all within the context of cross-functional studies spanning geology, mining and processing. 

#Comminution27
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