Saturday 26th February
I am now in Denver, for this year's annual meeting of the Society of Mining Engineers.
I have been to well over a dozen SME annual meetings, and always look forward to them with a sense of anticipation. I know many people who avoid them, as they feel that the events are characterless, and I have to agree that there is always a feeling of déja vu when entering the familiar soulless convention centre, with the layout of registration desks unchanging from previous years and cities. I also agree with many that there are too many papers lacking innovation, in endless parallel sessions.
However the SME provides one of the great annual meeting places for minerals industry operators, equipment manufacturers, researchers and academics, and as such is an event not to be missed. I tend to avoid most of the technical sessions and spend time wandering around the large exhibition, registration and book store areas, meeting up with old friends and always encountering faces from the past. As the SME does not publish a list of delegates in advance of the meeting, there are always welcome surprises in store.
I am here until Tuesday lunchtime and in that time will be recording my personal diary of events, so this is not meant to be a definitive report of the meeting. I invite all those who attended to add their own experiences and views in the comments section at the end of this posting.
Sunday 27th February
Downtown Denver is the most pleasant of all the SME venues, and this morning I registered early and then Barbara and I took our usual walk from the mile-high steps of the State Capitol down the attractive 16th Street Mall.
Around 3500 delegates have registered in advance of the meeting, compared with just over 3000 last year in Phoenix.
| The exhibition opened at 5 pm for two hours, and the first person I met was Fathi Habashi, Emeritus Professor at Laval University, Canada. He is truly inspirational, as at 82 years old he is as enthusiastic as ever, travelling around the world to present courses, and two papers at this meeting |
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InfoMine is the largest minerals industry web site and I met up with their team at their booth. They now run courses on various aspects of the minerals industry and we talked about associating these with relevant MEI conferences. |
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Moving on, I met up with Zhenghe Xu of the University of Alberta, Andrew Vince of Elsa Consulting Group Australia, and Kevin Galvin of University of Newcastle, Australia. Zhenghe is a reviewer for Minerals Engineering, and Kevin is a member of the Editorial Board. |
I called in at the
Outotec booth, to talk to our sponsors of
SRCR '11 and
Flotation '11. It was good to meet
Misty Dobbins, Marketing Communications Officer for North America, pictured 2nd from right in the photo in front of the 1/20 scale Outotec grinding mills, one equipped with the new turbo pulp lifter. It was also interesting to hear from the Global Mills Technology Manager,
Sanjeeva Latchireddi (3rd left)
who I have known for some time, that he was one of my students when I taught a course in mineral processing at the Indian School of Mines in 1989!
International Mining are media sponsors for MEI's
Physical Separation '11 and
Flotation '11 conferences. They have had their best first quarter ever in terms of advertising commitments, which is surely a good indication of the state of the industry. Pictured are
Phil Playle, Paul Moore and
John Chadwick. Paul joined International Mining in December and he was previously editor of Mining Magazine from 2006.
It is a number of years since I last saw
Steve Hearn, who is now with Huntsman in Colorado. He is pictured below left with
Herninio Muchon and
Noah Denson. Huntsman are involved with flotation and hydrometallurgy reagents, particularly with higher strength frothers with high flash points. They also manufacture depressants for pyrite, talc, clays etc. While at the Huntsman booth I caught up with
Erik Spiller, an old friend and now Professor at Colorado School of Mines.
Monday 28th February
Not too many familiar faces in the registration area this morning. I have to keep reminding myself that although there are over 3500 people here, there may be only around 200 mineral processors. While waiting for the exhibition to open at 11am, I did manage to talk to
Janusz Laskowski, who is presenting this afternoon's Gaudin Lecture, and
Greg Hope of Griffith University, Australia.
It was good to see
David Wiseman of Limn "the Flowsheet Processor". He tells me that a new version of Limn has been developed, which is compatible with XL 2007 and 2010 and is currently being beta tested. More news will be on
MEI Online when available. David's company is now associated with Bratton Engineering & Technical associates, USA, who will handle marketing and support in the US.
Industrial Minerals magazine is a media sponsor of 3 upcoming
MEI Conferences, and were represented by
Hamish Dobson, Ismene Clarke and
Mike O'Driscoll. Mike will be awarded the Hal Williams Hardinge Award at the SME, for services to the minerals industry, particularly for reporting on the Chinese industrial minerals industry. He is only the 4th Britain to achieve this award since its inception in 1952.
Starkey & Associates are sponsors of
Comminution '12.
John and his wife
Donna and
Paul Scinto are pictured in their booth. They have a new SAG mill at Inspectorate Labs in Vancouver, and a mill at Plenge in Peru awaiting commissioning. John is increasingly involved with consultancy and is currently working with Apogee Minerals Inc to assist in the redevelopment of the Pulacayo silver-lead-zinc deposit in Bolivia. He has also been hired by Claude Resources to supervise the testwork programme for development of the Amisk Project.
I called at the OSIsoft booth to see
Osvaldo Bascur and his assistant
Mariana Sandin. The new PI System which optimises the dynamic performance of mine to mill uses the latest data mining technologies. Hopefully Osvaldo will be presenting a paper at
Flotation '11.
JKTech of Australia are serial-sponsors of
MEI Conferences, and are very much involved with short courses and ran their
Mine to Mill Process Optimisation workshop over the weekend attended by 26 delegates. They will run 3 courses in association with
Flotation '11 and full details will soon be on
MEI Online. In the picture are
Mark Richardson, Dee Bradshaw and
Sara Schwarz.
Major lectures from the Mineral & Metallurgical Processing Division were presented in the afternoon.
This year's
Gaudin Lecture was given by
Janusz Laskowski, Emeritus Professor of University of British Columbia, Canada. His lecture had the lengthy title "From amine molecule adsorption to amine precipitate transport by bubbles: a potash ore flotation mechanism".
He is photographed with
Roe-Hoan Yoon (left), of Virginia Polytechnic & State University, who is honoured by a Symposium in his name which starts tomorrow morning.
The Richards Lecture was given by
Gary L. Simmons of G.L. Simmons Consulting, USA. "Then and now 1972-2011"
The Wadsworth Lecture "Platinum group metal extraction" was given by
William Davenport, Emeritus Professor of the University of Arizona.
I invite comments on these lectures from those who were present in the packed lecture room.
The greatest mine rescue of all time took place last year in Chile. The San Jose rescue of the 33 trapped miners was world headline news, and a highlight of the SME was a question and answer session with the major personalities involved in the rescue. This unfortunately clashed with many of the parallel technical sessions, including the Gaudin Lecture. This was surely important enough, and of such general interest, to have warranted a plenary session. A life-size replica of the Phoenix 1 capsule, which brought the miners to the surface, was on display in the exhibition hall. In the photo
Dee Bradshaw experiences the confinement of the rescue capsule.
Tuesday March 1st
I called in at the popular
SME Book Store this morning, and was naturally very pleased to see that my book
Mineral Processing Technology is the SME's best seller. I was also pleased to see that the seminal
SME Mining Engineering Handbook has recently been published in 3rd edition, incorporating all aspects of mining and mineral processing. Full details of the book will soon be on
MEI Online. I was also fortunate to be recognised by the editor of the handbook, ex-Camborne student
Peter Darling, who I have not seen for many years. Editing such a volume must have been a mammoth task, collating the information from over 250 internationally recognised mining industry experts.
The
R-H Yoon Symposium began this morning, with a bewildering array of parallel mineral processing sessions all commencing at the same time:
Coal Processing
Base Metal Flotation
Surface Forces and Hydrophobicity
Comminution
As before, I invite comments from those who attended any of these sessions.
Then on to a final walk around the exhibition hall.
I met
Joe Querin of Eriez Flotation Group (below left) and had a look at their column flotation cell.
One of the big problems in flotation is pumping froth, but
GIW of USA (below right) claims to have solved this problem with the HVF Pump, which gives the air a path out of the pump. They hope to display this at
Flotation '11 in November.
KHD Humboldt Wedag is one of the world's leaders in high pressure roll presses, and have recently installed 4 units in CAP Mineria in Chile and 2 in SNIM in Mauritania. They showed me their small model of a HPGR installation.
Before leaving the exhibition hall I spoke to
Starla Jackson of
FLSmidth, one of our
Flotation '11 sponsors, who was of the opinion that this has been one of the most successful SMEs, and judging by the number of people who were always in their giant display, I have to agree with her.
Finally I manage to see
Tara Davis, SME's membership and marketing manager. She told me that at Tuesday lunchtime over 5200 people had registered, making this one of the largest turnouts in many years.
I have thoroughly enjoyed my two days at the SME and will certainly be at next year's meeting in Seattle.
Once again I invite your personal comments on this year's event.