The XXVI IMPC was held at the Ashok Hotel, New Delhi, India, from September 24-28, 2012.
With around 675 papers presented in 17 themed symposia, and an associated exhibition, this report can only scratch the surface of the week's activities. MEI's involvement was mainly with the exhibition, so I invite all those who attended the Congress to submit their comments at the end of this posting.
Sunday September 23rd
Registration opened this morning and we were hoping to set up the MEI booth in the afternoon, but build-up of the booths in the large marquee in front of the Ashok was a long way from completion, so we relaxed before the evening welcoming session. This was an enjoyable event attended by a good number of delegates and accompanying guests, and where we had our first taste of the Indian cuisine which would be provided for us over the next five days.
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With 2012 Chairman B.K. Mishra |
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Belinda McFadzean, Jennie Wiese
and Natalie Shackleton (South Africa) |
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With Kari Heiskanen (Finland), K.S. Moon (Korea), Prakash Kapur (India) and Warren Bruckard (Australia) |
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With Jan Drzymala (2nd right) and colleagues |
It was great to catch up with old friends and to meet new people on the IMPC scene. It was particularly good to meet
Prof. Jan Drzymala and his colleagues from Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland, who are organising next year's
MEC 2013, which includes the 50th Symposium on Physicochemical Problems of Mineral Processing, founded by
Prof. Jan Laskowski, an
IMPC Lifetime Achievement Award winner. MEI is a media sponsor for the event, and I look forward to my first ever visit to Poland next September.
Monday September 24th
After the formal ceremony welcoming over 1000 delegates to the IMPC,
Prof. Samirk Brahmachari, Director General of CSIR gave an excellent inaugural address, starting with an overview of India's glorious past in mining and metallurgy and the future aims of CSIR. Due to India's high population density, the challenge is to protect people while exploiting mineral deposits, and clearly new technology is needed to reduce the effect of mining on the population and the environment. There is a need to change our mind-set in realising that we are dealing with finite resources, and technology which is energy efficient and reduces water consumption is required, as well as an increase in the amount of recycling.
Following the opening, delegates were welcomed to the exhibition, which was held in a large marquee in the Ashtok grounds, and the transformation of the interior after a day was reminiscent of the concern a couple of years ago regarding completion of the Commonwealth Games venue in India.
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What a difference a day makes |
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Amanda with IMPC Council
Chairman Cyril O'Connor |
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What was noticeable among the crowds that flocked in to see the booths was the effort that the IMPC has taken to bring as many students as possible to the meeting. This is highly commendable, and it was really good to meet these young people at the MEI booth.
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With VSK University students |
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Orissa School of Mining Engineering students |
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Biju Pattnaik University of Technology |
Continuing the theme of the inaugural address, the first plenary lecture was given by
Hemant Nerurkar, of Tata Steel, India, who discussed the challenges faced by mineral processing in sustainable development.
Prof. John Herbst of Metso Minerals, USA, then discussed advanced modeling techniques and their influence on our industry. He talked of Prof. A.M. Gaudin and his students at MIT, who were dedicated to understanding the fundamentals of mineral processing, and as a consequence were always searching for better quantitative descriptions of size reduction, liberation and mineral separations. Prof. Herbst has worked with many of the modelling pioneers who followed Gaudin and has observed first hand the refinement of models as they increased in realisticness from pure empiricism to the current pinnacle of physics based models. Advanced models currently save huge amounts of money by reducing design risks and allowing existing flowsheet optimisation and guiding the development of new high efficiency equipment.
Following lunch in the hotel grounds, the sessions split into seven parallel sessions dealing with all aspects of mineral processing.
Tuesday September 25th
Seven parallel sessions today, including the start of the
Processing of Precious Metals Symposium. This contained presentations on the flotation and leaching of PGM ores, which created a few dilemmas, as running in parallel were sessions on flotation and hydrometallurgy. These clashes have become a feature of IMPCs, and the only way to avoid them is to reduce the number of parallel sessions, which means reducing the number of papers. Is quality sustainable if, every two years, around 650 papers are accepted for presentation? I would like to hear views on this, particularly as it is claimed that each paper has been reviewed by at least two referees, a truly mammoth task.
Barun Gorain, of Barrick Gold, Canada, opened the Precious Metals symposium, noting that it was appropriate to hold this in India, consumer of over half the world's gold. The first keynote speaker,
Andrew Logan, remarked that he had just been to a conference where it was proposed that gold be treated as a currency, and not as a commodity, in these turbulent times.
There was much confusion regarding the three plenary lectures this morning. The first two speakers had to withdraw, so the organisers partly filled the gap by moving one of the Friday keynotes, not a good thing to do when people have already set their agendas. I particularly wanted to hear the keynote by
Prof. T.C. Rao on an holistic approach for sustainable growth of mineral processing industries. However when I arrived 10 minutes before the scheduled start, his presentation was almost over, due to another unannounced timetable change.
The day's technical sessions finished with afternoon tea, and a very good display of the 270 poster presentations, which was very well attended.
Overall a pretty good day, despite a few hiccups, which was rounded off nicely by the cultural evening where we were entertained by classical Indian dance recitals, followed by a buffet meal in the hotel grounds.
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With Pat and Ian Townsend (UK) and Jim Finch (Canada) |
Wednesday 26th September
The day started with 6 interesting keynotes, unfortunately all running concurrently. So I opted for
Prof. Jan Cilliers, of Imperial College, UK, who presented his final report on the global survey of the supply and demand of minerals engineers, the culmination of work first presented at the
Brisbane IMPC, and then at
SRCR '11 in Falmouth. Among the interesting facts presented was that China produces 51% of the world's minerals engineering graduates, South America next with 20%, and very surprisingly, India and Australia only 2% and 1% respectively.
China is obviously going to play a major role in the future of minerals engineering, and this is reflected by the high number of delegates at the congress, a trend which has also been apparent at
MEI Conferences.
Seven out of the 70 exhibitors at the IMPC are from China. Florrea Mining Reagents is a manufacturer of flotation reagents, there are two ceramic grinding media manufacturers,
King's Ceramics, who are sponsors of
Comminution '14, and
Chemco. Magnetic separators are manufactured by
SLon Magnetic Separator Ltd, Shandong Huate Magnetic Technology and Longi Magnet Co, Ltd, and hydrocyclones by Weihai Haiwang Hydrocyclone Co. Ltd.
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Jon with Zhang Yongliang of Florrea |
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Weihai Haiwang Hydrocyclones |
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Shandong Huate Magnetic Technology |
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Chemco |
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All delegates were invited to the IMPC General Body Meeting, where
Dr. Pradip, President of the Organising Committee, announced that the final number of registrations was 1259 delegates from 45 countries, with 572 from India and 121 from China, these two countries accounting for over half the delegates. At this meeting it was announced that Moscow has been invited to bid for the 2018 IMPC.
Thursday 27th September
Today was the final exhibition day and traffic was noticeably thin. Jon and I manned the booth while Amanda took the day off to visit the Taj Mahal at Agra.
One of our neighbouring booths was manned by
Daniel Johnston, of Industrial Tomography Systems (ITS) plc, a world leader in electrical resistance tomography. He is pictured left with
Suneil Dua, Director of Spectro Lab Equipments, the exclusive distributor of ITS, and
Prof. Richard Williams, Pro-Vice Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, UK. This UK company provides a range of electrical and acoustic-based tomography systems for research and process applications. These systems provide data to improve process efficiency, characterise particle size distribution, investigate multi component flowrate and develop new and improved mixing technologies.
Tomography was the subject of one of this morning's plenary lectures, given by
Prof. Jan Miller of the University of Utah, who will also present a keynote at
Process Mineralogy '12. He discussed the advances that have been made in X-ray tomography for the processing of mineral resources. Resource characterisation is a critical component for optimisation of the mine to mill process, including innovative processing for sustainable growth. Such characterisation is now referred to as geometallurgy, with advanced instrumentation being used, including high resolution X-ray tomography. The geometallurgical information obtained is important for mine planning, design and analysis of separation processes, etc.
It was a great pleasure to see
Prof. T.C. Rao after many years, one of India's most respected mineral processors. A real gentleman, he was described by one of yesterday's chairmen as the father of Indian minerals engineering. He was one of the pioneers of empirical modelling of hydrocyclones, and I first met him in 1989, when I was his
guest as a visiting lecturer at the Indian School of Mines. He was then Head of the Department of Fuel and Minerals Engineering, after which he was Director of the Regional Research Laboratory (CSIR) at Bhopal. He is now an independent consultant advising various industries.
Following lunch I had a meeting with Gecamin, one of the organisers of the 2014 IMPC, which will be held in Santiago, Chile. So I unfortunately missed what was apparently an excellent panel discussion on Leveraging Information and Communication Technology in Mining and Mineral Processing. If anyone can fill in any details I would be grateful.
The conference banquet was held at the India Expo Centre, an hour's coach drive away. This was a glittering occasion that I enjoyed, in no small part due to the interesting and sociable people on my table.
A very popular feature
introduced at the Brisbane IMPC is the presentation of awards to the authors of the 10 best papers presented by authors under 35 years of age, who are pictured below. I wonder if anyone can put names to faces?
The highlight of the evening was the presentation of mineral processing's most prestigious award, the IMPC Lifetime Achievement Award. The recipient was
Prof. P.C. Kapur, and more details on this can be found on the posting of
27th September.
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Prof. Kapur (2nd left) with Prof. Jan Laskowski, Prof. Eric Forssberg,
Prof. Cyril O'Connor and Dr. Pradip |
Friday 28th September
Presenting a paper on the last day of a 5-day conference is a thankless task, but there was a very good attendance this morning for the sessions, which reflects on the quality of the week's presentations, which people say has been generally high.
The first of the two final plenary lectures was given by
Andrew Lane of The Monitor Group, South Africa. Entitled
The Promise of Africa he highlighted that 95% of the world's chromium, 88% of platinum and 66% of phosphates are mined in Africa, so there are great opportunities, but he also pointed out the great risks on this turbulent continent.
Lifetime achievement award recipient
P.C. Kapur presented the final plenary, a philosophical ramble through mineral processing and its problems, showing that mineral processing is complex and has evolved empirically and very slowly over many decades.
In closing the congress, IMPC Council Chairman
Prof. Cyril O'Connor thanked the Indian organising committee for providing an event worthy of the diamond jubilee year of IMPC. The President of the 2012 IMPC,
Dr. Pradip, then passed the baton on to
Prof. Juan Yianatos, of Santa Maria University, Chile, the President of the 2014 IMPC, which will be organised by Gecamin, and the Universities of Chile, Concepcion and Santa Maria.
The Proceedings of the congress was issued to all delegates on memory stick, and I am hoping to hear whether this is generally available, for the purpose of citation of papers in journal articles. The sessions on Human Resources is to be published as a monograph, and more information on this will be published on
MEI Online when available.
On behalf of MEI I would like to thank
Dr. Pradip and
Prof. B.K. Mishra, the Chairman of the Organising Committee, and their team for all their work in bringing the IMPC to India. Organisation of an event as big as this is a monumental task, and it is inevitable that there will be flaws and frustrations. Nevertheless this has been an interesting and productive week, and MEI is immensely proud to have been associated with the congress as a media sponsor. We have enjoyed our week at the IMPC and invite the comments of all those who attended. How was it for you?