Thursday, 11 June 2026

UK Mining Conference continues to grow

The annual UK Mining Conference in Cornwall was created by Jeremy Wrathall, of Cornish Lithium, in 2019 and is aimed at professional and private investors, brokers, financial institutions, supply chain consultants, government representatives, trade associations, as well as mine operators and explorers. 

Cornwall is the most appropriate area of the UK to hold such an event at it is at the centre of a renewed UK mining boom because of its deposits of lithium, tin, tungsten and other critical minerals. Recent developments include geothermal-lithium extraction projects and efforts to reopen historic mines such as South Crofty. An independent report published this week highlights how Cornish Lithium is set to unlock £5bn for the UK economy, tripling the GVA of the mining and quarrying sector in Cornwall and creating a further 1000+ jobs in the county. Lithium production should support the production of 760,000 EVs per year, enough to meet around 40% of the Government's annual lithium production target by 2035. 

The conference was held on 10-11 June, and was attended by over 450 delegates from 21 countries, a far cry from the 30 delegates at its inception in 2019. There were also pre and post conference events, including a geothermal forum, a geologists workshop, an investors congress, various site visits and a gala dinner with presentation of awards.

On the evening prior to the conference I called in at my 'local' the Chain Locker to hopefully catch up with some of the delegates attending a Cornish buffet supper, and I wasn't disappointed. I shared an outside table with a group of familiar Camborne School of Mines people. Linda and Mark Shimmield are based in Adelaide, but spend time in Cornwall each summer. Linda was the founding secretary of the CSM Association, and husband Mark graduated in mining engineering in 1982 and three years later Paul Benjamin and Andrew Mitchell graduated in mineral processing. It was also good to meet Arlan Yeleusszov. from Kazakhstan, who is completing an MSc in mining at CSM.

Linda, Paul, Arlan, Andrew, me and Mark

It was also good to see Jens-Michael Bergmann and Oxana Penning, of TOMRA, who will be supplying their sensor-based sorting machines to Cornwall's South Crofty tin mine and to Devon's Tungsten West mine at Hemerdon. The company will be exhibiting at Comminution '27 in Cape Town next April.

And on the way home I bumped into another CSM alumnus, Kirk Adams, and his partner Isabelle. Kirk, who will be the MC at the conference dinner, graduated in mining engineering in 1985.

UK Mining in Cornwall is not a mineral processing conference, but the venue, Falmouth's Princess Pavillion is only a short distance from home, so, as last year, I called in for the first morning, hoping to catch up with a few familiar faces.

Delegates have come from all over the world and none so far as Australia, so it was great to see Ben Wraith and Nigel Grigg, of Gekko Systems, Melbourne. Gekko will be providing jigs to Tungsten West and likely to the South Crofty project.

Ben and Nigel

Sepro Mineral Services will be supplying Falcon gravity concentrators to South Crofty, and Doug Caffell I last saw in Cape Town in April, where Sepro were exhibiting at Physical Separation '26 and Mineral Processing Circuits '26.

Doug Caffell (right) at the Sepro booth

Dave Mildren was also at Physical Separation '26 representing Gravity Mining as a sponsor. Cornwall-based Gravity Mining produces the Multi-Gravity Separators, and Dave and his bother Treve were at the MintMech stand, talking to their team of Ashley Hares, Laurie Thornton and Alun Jones. MintMech is a Cornwall-based engineering company focused on offshore marine, drilling, automation, and specialist industrial equipment.

MintMech also provides engineering and fabrication support to Gravity Mining, handling the design and build of the huge C910 MGS chassis, drum support arms and oscillating drive mount, to improve construction and performance.

Ashley, Laurie, Treve, Dave and Alun

I was pleased that Mervyn Stevens and Dan Cairns, of Worley, UK, introduced themselves to me. They will be at Critical Minerals '26 in Cape Town in November, where Mervyn will be presenting a paper on circular battery flowsheets, incorporating process intensification, selective impurity rejection and reagent regeneration to improve lithium, nickel, cobalt, and manganese recovery.

With Mervyn and Dan

It was great to see the AFX Mixing and Pumping Technologies team. The company sponsored Biomining '20, which was scheduled to be held in Falmouth, but because of Covid became an online conference, Biomining '21 the following year.

AFX Mixing and Pumping Technologies is a UK and South Africa-linked engineering company that designs and manufactures industrial mixing systems, agitators, and peristaltic hose pumps for heavy-duty process industries. The South African side of the business began as AFROMIX in 2006 and the UK business, AFX Mixing And Pumping Technologies Limited, was incorporated in 2015 and is headquartered in Poole, Dorset. Because of the South African connection the team expressed strong interest in an involvement with Hydrometallurgy '27 next year in Cape Town.

The AFX team

I had to confess to Kevin Hall and Steve Kilner that I had never heard of BJD Crushers, so it was good to talk to them. The company is based in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, and traces its roots back to 1897 under the original name British Jeffrey Diamond, which is where the initials BJD come from. They produce roll and impact crushers for quarrying, cement production, waste recycling, power generation and chemical processing.

Kevin and Steve

And finally, it's always great to catch up with Lucy Crane, who also lives in Falmouth. Lucy is Managing Director of Women in Mining (UK). WIM UK is a professional organisation, founded in 2006 to promote careers in mining and minerals for women, support networking and mentorship, improve gender diversity in the industry and to highlight female leaders and role models. It works with mining companies, universities, and policy makers to improve inclusion across the sector.

Lucy (centre) and the WIM UK team

It was an interesting few hours at the meeting and, as always, Jay One Events should be congratulated on organising such a large conference so efficiently. The next UK Mining Conference in Cornwall is scheduled for the week beginning 14th June 2027, at Falmouth's Princess Pavillion.

#MEIBlog

Monday, 8 June 2026

When Solvent Extraction came to Africa

My career in mineral processing began in October 1969 at the the Nchanga Copper Mine in Zambia. In 1969 Nchanga produced copper from a mixed ore containing about 3% copper by weight. Ore had been mined from underground since 1938, but in 1955 open-pit mining commenced, and the giant Nchanga open-pit and the smaller Chingola and Mimbula-Fitula pits began to contribute to a total milled tonnage of about 30,000 tonnes per day treated at the massive operation. Underground ore contains mainly suphide minerals, chalcocite, chalcopyrite, covellite, bornite, while the shallower open-pit ores contain oxidised minerals, mainly malachite and azurite, as well as cuprite and chrysocolla.

My first two years at Nchanga were on the concentrator, mainly involved with flotation. The milled ore from underground and the open pits was first fed to sulphide flotation; then the sulphide tailings were sulphidised (using sodium hydrosulphide) before recovering the oxidised minerals. High grade sulphide concentrates were shipped 30 miles to Rhokana in Kitwe for smelting and high grade oxide concentrates were pumped to the high-grade leach-electrowinning plant.

Oxidised copper flotation is always less inefficient than sulphide flotation, and at Nchanga the situation is exacerbated because of the presence- in addition to the recoverable malachite and azurite- of relatively large amounts of poorly floatable cuprite and almost totally non-floatable chrysocolla.  Consequently, with an overall recovery of about 85%, the final tailings from oxide flotation still contained around 0.4% acid-soluble copper, resulting in a loss to the final tailings dams of around 150 tonnes per day of copper. 

It was decided that these losses must be recovered and the metallurgical manager, Jack Holmes (posting of 11 November 2017) was taken out of the direct management stream to determine how to deal with the  losses. He looked at many schemes but homed in on leach-solvent extraction after having travelled to the USA with a small team* to evaluate its potential.

Jack Holmes with the MEI team in 2017

In the late 1960s (1968 at Ranchers Bluebird Mine and 1970 at Bagdad Mine), solvent extraction had been successfully introduced to copper processing in the USA; so, after much process evaluation, a decision was made to develop and build a huge tailings treatment plant at Nchanga, to recover copper from not only continuing tailings arisings, but also from past tailings stored in the dams, and in 1974 this, then (and for many years) the world's largest solvent extraction plant, came on-stream, treating about 900,000 tonnes of tailings per month.

The huge plant was built in two stages, to achieve copper production as soon as possible. In stage 1, thickeners and neutralisation vessels were erected, together with the leaching pachucas in which the tailings minerals would be intensively agitated in a dilute solution of sulphuric acid to produce a weak copper sulphate solution. This would be upgraded and purified in Stage 2 by the solvent extraction process, before precipitating the copper by electrolysis.

During construction of Stage 2 I was on the commissioning team which put into operation Stage 1, to treat a large stockpile of low grade oxide concentrate, which had hitherto been found difficult to treat economically . The copper in this stage was precipitated from solution by cementation onto scrap iron in temporary Kennecott Cone units.

Leach pachucas and Kennecott Cones

I left before the Tailings Leach Plant came into operation, but was amazed when I visited in 2012 to see the scale of this process, which now treats up to 50,000 tonnes per day of current sulphide flotation tailings and old tailings in the leach-SX plant, 4500 tonnes per month of final copper being produced in a giant electrowinning tankhouse. 

A section of the massive Tailings Leach Plant in 2012,
with the smelter in the background on the site of the old high-grade leach plant

At MEI's Hydrometallurgy '27 conference in Cape Town next year, Dr. Kathy Sole will present a keynote lecture and will show how this elegant copper processing technology conforms to the principles for a circular hydrometallurgical flowsheet, 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 and the keynote will draw on examples of developments and advances during the past five decades, and continuing in the modern era.

Kathy Sole holds a PhD from the University of Arizona. She has been providing independent hydrometallurgical consulting services since 2011, with clients on six continents, and has worked across a wide range of commodities, including base metals, uranium, titanium, vanadium, and precious metals. Her main areas of expertise are in solvent extraction, ion exchange, and electrowinning. She also holds an adjunct professor position at the University of Pretoria. She received the 2019 Milton E. Wadsworth award from the SME and was twice awarded the Silver Medal of the SAIMM. Kathy is a Fellow of SAIMM and the South African Academy of Engineers.

* I would like to thank Ken Severs, who was part of the Stage 2 commissioning team, for checking details in this posting for accuracy.

#Hydrometallurgy26
#MEIBlog

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Growth Steel is the latest sponsor of Comminution '27

The Indonesian company Growth Steel is formally part of the Growth Steel Group, a privately held industrial manufacturing group headquartered in Medan, Indonesia. The group is best known internationally for supplying wear-resistant steel products and mill lining systems to the global mining industry. 

Growth Steel's first MEI Conference was Comminution '25, where they were represented by five delegates, four from Indonesia and one from UK, and they exhibited at the event. Now we welcome them back, not only as an exhibitor, but also as a sponsor of Comminution '27.

The Growth Steel team at Comminution '25

The company traces its roots to the Suhendra family, which founded the broader Growth Steel Group in 1964. The Growth brand as a mining and foundry business was established in 1989 and expanded into mining industry wear parts around 1996. Although headquartered in North Sumatra, Indonesia the company has additional sales offices located strategically around the world such as Australia, South Africa, Ghana, Peru, Chile and China. 

Growth Steel has the world’s largest single-location mill liner foundry and has become one of the world’s leading manufacturing foundries and a major global supplier of grinding mill lining systems. The company primarily serves mining and mineral processing operations, its products including steel and rubber mill liners, grinding balls and rods, crusher wear parts, fasteners and steel castings for heavy industrial use.

#Comminution27
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Sunday, 31 May 2026

May summary: sad news from South Africa, and the first heatwave of the year

None of the MEI team were at home on the first of the month. Amanda was in the Isles of Scilly, competing in the annual World Gig Championships.

Jon and family were camping in Nommerlayern, Luxembourg and Barbara and I were enjoying our last day at Plettenberg Bay, before the long taxi ride to George airport the next day, a short flight to Cape Town, the long flight to London and the long train journey to Cornwall.

A farewell to Plettenberg Bay

There was also sad news from South Africa early in the month. A memorial was held at the University of Cape Town on the 8th of the month, for Martin Harris, who died the previous month at the age of 66.

After completing his Masters degree at UCT, Martin joined the Centre for Minerals Research (CMR) in 1987. and made many contributions to the research carried out at the CMR. His initial involvement was in coal processing under the tutelage of his Master’s supervisor Professor JP Franzidis. Subsequently he specialised in the area of flotation circuit modelling, playing a key role in the development of flotation models under the AMIRA P9 project as one of the lead flotation researchers in that international flagship project. He attended few conferences, apart from some IMPCs and his last MEI Conference was fifteen years ago at Flotation '11, although Jon has good memories of socialising with him at the Centenary of Flotation in 2005. Tributes to Martin can be found on LinkedIn.

It is a while since I undertook a serious hike on the Cornish coastal path, part of the 630 miles (1014 km) South-West Way. The Cornish section is 300 miles (480 km) long and is notoriously rugged with many up and down sections. I can cope easily with the uphill sections, but struggle going downhill due to ancient knees!

Although the north coast, exposed to the Atlantic Ocean, has the most strenuous walks, there are some tough walks on the south-east path from St. Mawes to the Devon border and I have only done a few hikes along this stretch, a tough one being Carne Beach to Portloe, then on to Portholland, and especially Mevagissey to Charlestown, probably the most demanding hike on Cornwall's south coast. This month Amanda and her rowing friend Mo, walked the 77 miles from St. Mawes to Plymouth in six days. 

Amanda at Mevagissey harbour ready for the gruelling walk to Charlestown
Replica of the Nao Santa María in Charlestown harbour.
The ship is a full-scale replica of the 15th Century sailing ship used by
Christopher Columbus on his first expedition across the Atlantic in 1492.
Although the hike is generally considered moderate overall, Amanda and Mo welcomed their overnight stops, remarking that there are definitely some demanding sections as the path constantly goes down into coves and back up cliffs, so the cumulative ascent is substantial.
A welcome stop at Portloe

Mixing with the locals in Plymouth

Luckily the weather was perfect for hiking, unlike the following weekend where the UK was hit by a heatwave, with temperatures well over 30C recorded. Temperatures reached 27C here in Falmouth, and the beaches were packed during the Bank Holiday weekend, when Jon and family called in for a few days, giving us the opportunity for a family reunion on the beach.

Falmouth's Gyllyngvase beach, Bank Holiday Saturday
Family reunion on the beach

#MEIBlog

Thursday, 28 May 2026

Mining the Pixels: AI Image Processing for Mineral Processing

Artificial intelligence (AI) enabled image processing is rapidly becoming a core measurement layer in modern mineral processing, converting visual process states into quantitative variables for monitoring, optimisation, and, less commonly but most invaluably, closed-loop control. Yet the field remains fragmented: flotation research focuses on froth and bubble interpretation; comminution applications focus on conveyor-based fragmentation and oversize detection; ore sorting emphasises sensor physics (often XRT/HSI) and classification; and mineralogical characterisation leverages microscopy and 3D X-ray volumes for phase segmentation and liberation metrics. 

At MEI's inaugural AI in Mineral Processing '27 conference in Cape Town, Saeed Chelgani, of Luleå University of Technology, Sweden, will present a keynote lecture unifying these streams under a single "industrial AI vision" framework that spans sensors, model classes, deployment constraints and process value pathways.

Saeed will show how current AI vision systems are used at the industrial scale in mineral processing, where they fail in practice; which emerging computer-vision paradigms, mature in adjacent high-technology domains but underused in mineral processing, offer opportunities to improve robustness, generalisation, and interpretability; and how these opportunities can be realised.

Although Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) based architectures and standard object detection models remain the dominant approach for mineral processing tasks such as bubble segmentation and particle sizing, their performance often declines when applied across changing ore bodies. In most cases, they also offer limited support for explicitly modeling temporal dynamics or prediction confidence. 

Saeed will suggest that the next leap in industrial performance in mineral processing requires integrating next-generation architectures such as Vision Transformers (ViTs), Graph Neural Networks (GNNs), and foundation and diffusion models. Together, these models offer superior handling of complex texture discrimination and can be retrained and fine-tuned via self-supervised learning to address the lack of high-quality labeled data. By shifting toward generative pipelines for synthetic data augmentation and adopting Bayesian or conformal approaches for safety-critical decisions, the field can move away from fragile, label-hungry models toward more resilient systems that better support operational reliability

Saeed is a professor of mineral processing and the Director of the Swedish School of Mines at Luleå University of Technology. His work primarily focuses on mineral processing, particularly flotation separation, AI modeling, surface chemistry, and the development of materials for both primary and secondary mineral processing. His research spans from fundamental studies on particle-bubble interactions to applied projects in battery recycling, green flotation mechanisms, chemicals, and new reagent development. Currently, he is involved in projects on lithium-ion battery recycling, phosphate flotation in collaboration with LKAB, and AI modeling of industrial units.

#AI27
#MEIBlog

Monday, 25 May 2026

A spectacular journey over the mountains from George to Cape Town

The International Mineral Processing Congress  and MEI's Process Mineralogy '26 and Critical Minerals '26 are only 5 month's away (posting of 18th May) and there will be many for whom this will be a first visit to South Africa and the beautiful Western Cape region.

I hope that you will stay on after any of these events to sample what this amazing country has to offer. Staying on in Cape Town is a good choice, but if you would like to take a truly memorable experience home with you, I can recommend a 6 day (minimum) spectacular drive from George, over the mountains via two scenic mountain passes, the Karoo desert, a quirky old town, and some of the finest wine districts. Barbara and I have travelled this route several times and recommend it as a great South African 'taster'. 

The town of George is 435 km from Cape Town, but there are regular one-hour flights from Cape Town International Airport to the airport at George, and cars can be rented from here. Because of the easily accessible airport, George is often regarded as the start of the famous Garden Route, the N2 motorway taking you east to the resorts of Wilderness, Knysna and Plettenberg Bay. This is a favourite tourist route but I find it personally underwhelming as the famous route is mostly just the N2 highway, and large parts are inland, suburban, forested, or commercial rather than constantly scenic ocean views. Over-development has changed the feel in some areas. Locals and environmental groups frequently complain that estate developments, road traffic, and urban sprawl are eroding the old "untouched paradise" image.

Travelling inland from George is, however, an overwhelming experience.

After a first night in George, the drive between George and Oudtshoorn is one of the classic short scenic road trips in South Africa’s Garden Route region. It is only about 60 km and usually takes 45-60 minutes. Heading north on the N12 a gradual climb leads to the Outeniqua Pass, a winding mountain road through the dramatic Outeniqua Mountains, with great viewpoints over valleys and mountains.

Barbara, Amanda and Jon on the Outeniqua Pass, 1982

Then there is a sudden landscape shift to green mountains and the dry semi-desert Karoo leading to Oudtshoorn, the ostrich capital of the world. The town built its wealth in the late 1800s and early 1900s on the ostrich feather boom and even today visitors are welcomed to some of the large ostrich farms around the town.

Oudtshoorn

A short detour from Oudtshoorn is to the Cango Wildlife Ranch, renowned for its cheetah conservation, operating one of the world’s largest cheetah breeding centres and maintaining some of the highest survival rates for cubs globally.

The nearby Cango Caves is one of South Africa’s most famous natural attractions. The massive limestone cave system contains dramatic stalactites and chambers and options range from easy guided walks to adventure crawling routes.

Cango Wildlife Ranch and Cango Caves, 1982
I would recommend an overnight stop in Oudtsdoorn and then the next day keep fingers crossed that the R328 to Prince Albert is open as the Swartberg Pass is one of the most famous mountain roads in South Africa, a dramatic gravel pass crossing the Swartberg Mountains. It is widely considered one of the great scenic drives in the country. The southern Oudtshoorn side climbs gradually through red rock formations and then becomes steeper near the summit at 1580m. The northern side descending toward Prince Albert is the most dramatic, with classic zigzags and sheer drops, but despite the exposure, most of the pass is manageable in a normal car in dry weather if driven slowly and carefully.
Swartberg Pass, 1997
Built in the 1880s the pass is considered an engineering masterpiece because it was constructed largely by hand using dry-stone retaining walls, which have survived more than a century of weather, floods, and mountain conditions.
Swartberg Pass, 2008, showing dry stone retaining walls
If the Swartberg Pass is closed due to bad weather, the best alternative from Oudtshoorn is the N12 to De Rust through Meiringspoort, which is also spectacular, and then the R407 to Prince Albert, a great place for a third overnight stop. Prince Albert is known for its well-preserved Cape Dutch and Victorian architecture and has developed a reputation for quality food. There is an abundance of accommodation from historic guesthouses to farm-style cottages and we have always stayed overnight at the Dennehof Karoo Guest House, set in a restored 19th-century homestead.
Prince Albert
The next day is a leisurely 160 km drive from Prince Albert to Matjiesfontein, a classic Great Karoo road trip through some of the most open, quiet, and scenic semi-desert landscapes in the Western Cape, where wild flowers suddenly bloom after heavy rain.
Wild flowers in the Great Karoo
The R407 leads to the N1 motorway and on to the little village of Matjiesfontein, an historic village, known for its well-preserved Victorian architecture and railway heritage. Founded in the late 19th century, it gained prominence as a fashionable health resort and a key stop on the Cape’s main railway line (the famous Blue Train makes its only stop here on route to Pretoria from Cape Town). 
It's definitely worth spending a night here at the historic Lord Milner Hotel in the centre of the village. The Lord Milner is part hotel, part museum-piece, and part old colonial time capsule.
The Lord Milner Hotel, 2008
The London bus village tour and a great pub atmosphere in the hotel
Back on the N1 the drive from Matjiesfontein to Worcester is one of the classic Western Cape transitions, leaving the stark, open Karoo and gradually descending into fertile wine country framed by dramatic mountains.
Wine country near Worcester
Worcester is the gateway to the wine districts and from here you can explore the Robertson, Paarl and Stellenbosch wine routes, but if time is limited I recommend taking the road to Franschhoek, one of the most beautiful towns, with some of the best restaurants in South Africa. One of our favourites is La Petite Ferme, with its stunning views of the Franschhoek Valley, but there are many wine estates with fabulous views and food.
La Petite Ferme, 2008
Lunch at Mont Rochelle Estate, 2009
When you feel the time is right to leave Franschhoek, I suggest a great full day journey back to Cape Town via three short stops. Leave Franschhoek on the R45 towards Paarl then take the R310 towards Stellenbosch, but shortly after joining the R310 drop into Boschendal, one of the country's most famous and historic wine estates, dating back to 1685. Boschendal is a great place to stop for morning coffee, or for wine tasting under the shade of the oak trees.
The Manor House at Boschendal
Wine tasting, 2008
Back on the road, the R310 takes you to the second oldest town in South Africa, Stellenbosch. Founded in 1679, Stellenbosch is best known for its Cape Dutch architecture, oak-lined streets and its main avenue, Dorp Street, which is often called a "museum street" because the architecture and urban layout are preserved so well that the entire street functions like a walk-able exhibition of centuries of town history. It's also a great place to eat before moving on to the last stage of our journey.
Dorp Street, Stellenbosch
Take the R44 south from Stellenbosch to Somerset West and then exit toward Lourensford Road to the Vergelegen Wine Estate, one of the standout destinations in the Cape Winelands. It is famous for its heritage gardens and preserved Cape Dutch architecture and for its fine wines.
Vergelegen
From Vergelegen it is only about 30-40 minutes to Cape Town International Airport, and to Cape Town itself a further 30 minutes or so, along the N2. The end of a fantastic journey, which I am sure you will never forget. I rate it the best road journey in South Africa, but if you have other ideas please let us know.