Wednesday 31 January 2024

Conundrum to sponsor all six forthcoming MEI conferences

Artificial Intelligence came to MEI Conferences last year and at Flotation '23 we welcomed the first time involvement of Conundrum, a UK company run by self-confessed "process engineering geeks" and AI experts, many with doctoral degrees in maths and physics. They create advanced machine learning software for the digital transformation of the metals and mining industry, which they feel is an industry foundational to the modern economy where digital transformation secures enormous financial and sustainable manufacturing impact. 

We were pleased that they were so impressed by Flotation '23 that they signed up at the meeting as sponsors of the next one, Flotation '25. In the photo below Commercial Director Mat Matthews, with  Pavel Prikhodko, seals the agreement with MEI's Jon.

Conundrum event manager Gabriela Tiborová said "Conundrum is eager to continue its participation in upcoming MEI events, following the enlightening experience at Flotation '23 in Cape Town. The wealth of knowledge gained from the technical presentations over the three-day conference was invaluable, providing an enriching platform for interaction and contribution. We are excited to be sponsoring the upcoming MEI events this year and sharing the knowledge within the industry."

We are delighted that Conundrum has now agreed to provide sponsorship of all six conferences in our portfolio. We look forward to a long and fruitful relationship with this dynamic new company.

#PhysicalSeparation24
#MillCircuits24
#ProcessMineralogy24
#CriticalMinerals24
#Comminution25
#Flotation25

Sunday 28 January 2024

Visit Africa's jewel in the crown after MEI's June conferences

The end of this week is the deadline for abstract submissions to Physical Separation '24 and Mill Circuits '24, which run back to back in Cape Town in June.

If you intend spending some time in Southern Africa after the conferences you may wish to stay on in Cape Town (see 10 good reasons to spend some time in Cape Town). Or you might like to take advantage of June being an ideal time to travel north for some great game viewing. The best time to visit Southern Africa on safari is widely considered to be May to September. This is when the main safari parks, such as South Africa's Kruger National Park, experience the dry season and with less vegetation wildlife watching opportunities are greatly improved. 

My recommendation would be to take one of the daily flights from Cape Town to Africa's jewel in the crown, the magnificent Victoria Falls (posting of 16 July 2015).  Or if time (and your budget) allows, take the leisurely Rovos train from Pretoria to Victoria Falls, travelling through the heart of Matabeleland (posting of 9 December 2019),

The Rovos train arrives at Victoria Falls

The flow of water over this magnificent waterfall is very seasonable. In April the floodwaters from the end of the rainy season swell the Zambezi and although the Falls are awesome, the volume of water and the associated spray is not ideal for photography, while at the end of the dry season, in November, there is often very little water flowing. June and July are ideal times for viewing this awesome spectacle, both from the Zimbabwe and Zambia sides. There is much game to be seen by the Zambezi, particularly elephants, hippos and if you are lucky, the elusive black rhino (posting of 26 November 2019).

The Falls from Zimbabwe
A sunset cruise on the Zambezi is a must

I would suggest that you obtain a 3-country visa for Zimbabwe, Zambia and Botswana. You can walk from Victoria Falls town in Zimbabwe and into Zambia via the Victoria Fall Bridge and perhaps Africa's best national Park, Chobe, is a short drive away in Botswana (posting of 22 July 2015) and there are several local companies providing day excursions into this area, which has Africa's greatest elephant population.

If you intend to make the most of your visit to Africa in June, you might like to contact our South African agent, Rene Simpson (simpsontours@gmail.com), who can organise a seamless visit for you.

Thursday 25 January 2024

Picturing the unimaginable: deep time and space

Most of us in the mining industry have an interest in geology and the tectonic forces that shape and change our earth. We all know that the dinosaurs became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period, some 65 million years ago, but in reality no one can envisage 65 million years, let alone 1 million years. 

One thousand years ago England was an Anglo-Saxon country, ruled by the Dane Canute who, legend has it, demonstrated to his subjects that as a king he was not a god, by ordering the tide not to come in knowing this would fail. A thousand years is a very long time, but try to imagine that 1000 times- no one can get to grips with a million years. 

If you have ever wondered where your town was located, say 300 million years ago, you now can, thanks to software engineer Ian Webster who has developed an amazing interactive map which tracks how the globe has changed over the course of the last 750 million years.

The image below, at 300 million years, shows the old continents coming together to form the supercontinent Pangea in the late Carboniferous Period. The outline of the UK is in the centre, and Cornwall is being gripped by the unimaginable tectonic forces which partially melted the mantle, which millions of years later, in the Permian Period, solidified into granite, the cracks being infilled with minerals which were later exploited in the Cornish tin and copper mines.

Webster's software provides a wonderful insight into the unimaginable, but the photo below just blows my mind!

When I was in my teens I was fascinated by astronomy, knowing that looking at the night sky I was looking into the past, as light had to travel immense distances to reach the earth- totally unimaginable distances. I knew that light travelled at 186,000 miles per second and could travel the equivalent of nearly 8 times around the world in one second, that light from the moon took nearly one and a half seconds to reach us and from the sun just over 8 minutes. Colossal distances!

But the closest star to the sun, Proxima Centauri, is 4.25 light years away, a staggering 40,208,000,000,000 km.

I was also aware that our sun was just one of hundreds of billions of stars (unimaginable!) in our spiral galaxy, the Milky Way, the name describing the galaxy's appearance from Earth, a hazy band of light seen in the night sky formed from stars that cannot be individually distinguished by the naked eye. Our galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years but our neighbouring Andromeda Galaxy is some 220,000 light-years wide, a fairly average galaxy size. The Andromeda Galaxy is 2.5 million light-years away and is the only spiral galaxy which can be seen with the naked eye on moonless nights.

The incredible James Webb telescope orbits the sun around 1.5 million kilometers from the Earth and the photo above is of a tiny region of deep space outside our own galaxy. The bright lights with projecting arms are stars in our galaxy, but the other points of light are not stars, but galaxies, each separated from its closest neighbour by on average 100,000 light years, and each of those points of light measure 3,000 to 300,000 light years across! Many of these galaxies are billions of light years away.

Webb’s image is approximately the size of a grain of sand held at arm’s length and reveals thousands of galaxies in a tiny sliver of vast Universe containing between 200 billion and 2 trillion galaxies. Totally unimaginable- marvel at the image and what it means, but don't dwell on it too long- it can truly blow your mind!

Monday 22 January 2024

The need to get more new blood in the mining industry

All analysts are agreed that the amounts of critical minerals needed to supply the green transition will have to be drastically increased over the next few years. Mining, mineral processing and the downstream production of materials are the key to the energy transition and are crucial to all societies, but it is estimated that the world will need to produce over the next 20-25 years the amount of copper that has been produced throughout all human history and will need to mine vast amounts of lithium, graphite, cobalt, rare earths and other critical minerals. This will require a ramp up of throughput at existing mines, new mines and a greater emphasis on recycling.

I and others have written many articles on the critical role of mining and the benefits of careers in mining, but in the majority of cases we are preaching to the converted and the mainstream media seem not to be too interested in the positive aspects of mining, preferring to concentrate on the impact of mining on the environment, highlighting the disasters which unfortunately sometimes take place.

Fortunately organisations such as the Critical Minerals Association are getting the message through to Governments that mining is essential for a sustainable future and the green transition and at the recent COP28 UN Secretary-General António Guterres announced his plan to set up a panel aimed to ensure the move from fossil fuels towards renewable energy is just, sustainable and benefits all countries. He said that the availability and accessibility of critical energy transition minerals is crucial to reach the goals set by the 2015 Paris Agreement.

However the mining industry is facing a critical skills gap, compounded with the impending ‘grey tsunami’, referring to the number of retirements anticipated. There is great concern about the future of the talent pipeline, where people servicing the sector are being replaced by only a trickle in North America, Australia and Europe.

There is a need to attract school leavers to mining and mineral processing, but unfortunately the number of mining degree courses has diminished rapidly over the years. In UK there were eight undergraduate mining degree courses in 1989 but now there are none, apart from the mining degree apprenticeship course at Camborne School of Mines. This is, however, training those working in the industry who are already committed to mining. Educational institutions must rally to increase enrollment numbers at the undergraduate level to offset the worldwide decline in programs that relate to mining, engineering, and extractive metallurgy.

In the USA the recent Mining Schools Act aims at establishing a grant programme for mining schools to receive funds in order to recruit students and carry out studies, research projects, or demonstration projects related to the production of minerals. It would also establish the Mining Professional Development Advisory Board to evaluate applications and recommend recipients to the Secretary of Energy, as well as ensuring that grant funds are appropriately used. If they can do this in USA, then why not elsewhere? 

I would be interested to hear feedback from the Institutes, the major mining companies and academic institutions on how they are approaching the critical skills shortage.

Friday 19 January 2024

January Cornish Mining Sundowner: some good and not so good news

There was a good turnout of around 20 for last night's sundowner at the County Arms Hotel, Truro.

It was good to see ex-Camborne School of Mines student Tim Henderson, down from his home in Scotland.  As the former Executive Director Operations for Glencore, Tim was responsible for overseeing all Glencore's worldwide copper operations, having previously served as Executive Director on the board of Mopani Copper Mines Plc and as Alternate Director on the board of Zambezi Resources Ltd, overseeing copper exploration in Zambia and identifying new opportunities in the Democratic Republic of Congo. 

On his retirement as Executive Director Operations for Glencore International AG, Tim was appointed in 2019 to the Advisory Board of Forbes & Manhattan Inc., a leading private merchant bank headquartered in Toronto, Canada, with a global focus on the resource and technology sectors. 

In 2013 Tim donated US$1.3 million to the CSM Trust to enable the Trust to continue its support for students and staff at the School, to expand the promotion of mining and minerals education. The CSM Trust is an independent charity whose objectives are to promote education and research in mineral resources disciplines and since 1993 has awarded grants exclusively to CSM as part of The University of Exeter. The Trustees are individuals who give their services voluntarily and serve as trustees as they have a special interest in supporting mining education and often CSM in particular. Tim is seen below with fellow members of the CSM Trust, which meets today.

CSM Trust members Pete Whitbread-Abrutat, Nick Clarke, Matt Colwill,
Tim Henderson and Robin Dunne (retired)

More good news this month that Cornwall has received a £4.7 million investment from the Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Good Growth Programme, which will accelerate Cornwall’s goal to be a major environmentally sustainable producer of critical minerals such as lithium, tin and tungsten, unlocking potentially thousands of jobs. Research has shown that Cornwall alone could meet more than half the UK’s 2030 demand for lithium, which is an essential part of the electric vehicle battery supply chain.

But it is not all good news on the Cornish Mining scene. Biohydrometallurgy '16 delegates will remember the evening at Heartlands, the mining heritage site at the Robinson's Shaft of the South Crofty Mine, where we had an informal Cornish buffet with a local male-voice choir providing the atmosphere to complement the area's rich mining past. Heartlands was opened in 2012 but sadly is about to close due to financial difficulties. A great shame as 360,000 visitors used the site every year and local schoolchildren used the site to learn about social history and their local mining heritage.

Heartlands, Camborne

The next sundowner will be at the Chain Locker in Falmouth on Thursday February 15th, from 5.30pm.

Monday 15 January 2024

Final calls for abstracts for Physical Separation '24 and Mill Circuits '24

This is a reminder that if you would like to present papers at Physical Separation '24 and/or Mill Circuits '24 the deadline for submission of short abstracts is the end of this month.

Physical Separation '24 is MEI's 8th Physical Separation conference and will be held at the Vineyard Hotel in Cape Town for the first time, from June 10th-12th.

The conference will bring together researchers and operators who have common interests in:

  • Gravity concentration methods - single and multi-G separators and dense medium separation
  • Classification techniques - hydrocyclones, air classifiers etc.
  • Solid-Liquid Separation - thickeners, clarifiers etc.
  • Electronic Sorting
  • Magnetic and electrostatic separation
  • Microwave technology.

The event will have an associated small exhibition and currently two booths are available for rental. We thank our sponsors, Capstone Copper and Comex Group, media partners International Mining and Minerals Engineering and industry advocate the Critical Minerals Association.

Mill Circuits '24 immediately follows Physical Separation '24, at the Vineyard Hotel and is MEI's first in what we hope will be an exciting new series. Sponsored by Capstone Copper, and with the same media partners and industry advocates as for Physical Separation '24, there will also be a small exhibition, for which there are 5 booths available at present.

This conference invites papers on new approaches to mineral processing circuits, whether through design, modelling, optimisation or operation. This includes integration of unit operations (e.g. comminution and flotation), novel flowsheets that incorporate new equipment and new approaches to optimising circuit design. The keynote lecture "Evolution to revolution? How can innovation in flotation technology deliver sustainable productivity, now and into the future?" will be given by Dariusz Lelinski,  Global Director, Flotation, FLSmidth, Salt Lake City, USA.

Abstracts should be submitted online to the website portals, Physical Separation '24 and Mill Circuits '24.

Thinking of staying on in Cape Town after the conferences? Take a look at 10 good reasons to spend some time in Cape Town.

Thursday 11 January 2024

Battery Minerals, Battery Metals, but what about Battery Materials?

Everyone is talking about batteries these days, and the metals that we need to manufacture them. But in fact what they often mean is that we need battery minerals in order to make the metals. And then of course there are the materials that are required to manufacture the batteries. This line of thinking has led to a new understanding of what we actually need to make batteries, and is known as the M4 concept (minerals, metals, materials, manufactured products). 

This comes with challenges, as now geologists, mineralogists, material scientists and product engineers all need to communicate with each other, in order to source, process, produce and recycle batteries. But unexpected discoveries have been the result. Under-utilized and sometimes forgotten technologies have suddenly started to become mainstream as the need for characterization of battery minerals moves at a pace. For example, Raman, LIBS, FTIR and hyperspectral imaging techniques are finding applications where previously not tested, and can now be used on lithium, graphite, cobalt, and nickel ores with great effect. Isotopes are particularly useful for establishing the provenance (traceability) of the minerals, with unusual systems such as lithium- and copper-isotopes showing much promise. All these developments suggests that the study of critical minerals is a vibrant and highly-evolving area of research and commercial activity, providing a much-needed boost to the Green Energy Transition, a more sustainable use of earth resources, and a bright future for all those involved.

All these aspects will be explored in what will be a fascinating keynote lecture from Prof. Alan Butcher at Critical Minerals '24 in Cape Town in November next year. Alan will also be much involved with Process Mineralogy '14 which immediately precedes it.

Alan R Butcher is Chief Scientist & Technical Director of Origin Analytical Ltd and X-ray Mineral Services Ltd., part of the Hafren Scientific Group, based in the UK. He is specifically focussing on critical minerals, specifically those related to the Green Energy revolution, Zero Waste practices, and the Circular Economy in general. One aspect of his work is the cross-disciplinary characterisation of minerals, metals and materials that are required for batteries, with an emphasis on novel imaging and analysis techniques, which bridge both scientific and engineering aspects. Alan is a geologist with over 40 years of experience in the field of applied mineralogy, having previously worked in the UK, South Africa, Australia, The Netherlands, and most recently Finland. Alan is also a Visiting Professor of Geoinspired Utilisation of Planetary Materials at The Open University, UK, where is researching how to bring Space technologies down to Earth.

#CriticalMinerals24

Monday 8 January 2024

We welcome back CITIC Heavy Industries as a sponsor of Comminution '25

CITIC Heavy Industries Co. Ltd (CITIC HIC), formerly known as Luoyang Mining Machinery, was one of the national key construction projects of China's First Five-Year Plan. The company has experienced significant changes and improvements over the past 60 years and has grown into both a national and international innovative and high-tech enterprise, a global large-sized backbone enterprise which has one of the largest manufacturing facilities for heavy-duty equipment that supports both projects in China and overseas. 

CITIC HIC has been involved with three previous MEI comminution conferences, in 2014, 2016 and 2018 but only once before, at Comminution '16, as a sponsor, so we are pleased to welcome them to Comminution '25, joining the other major companies who are sponsoring this event in Cape Town in April 2025.

The photo below, at Comminution '16 shows CITIC representatives Jianjun Tian (left), Richard Wood and Michael Rauscher (right), with Spike Taylor of Multotec Rubber (centre) and Steve Morrell (2nd left). Steve Morrell is the founder of CITIC SMCC Process Technology Pty Ltd, Australia, which operates as an independent consulting company, and is ultimately owned by CITIC Heavy Industries. At last year's SME Annual Meeting in Denver, Steve was the recipient of the Robert H. Richards Award for his long service and numerous contributions to the science and practice of comminution and mineral processing. We look forward to seeing the team again at Comminution '25.

See also Comminution '25 off to a flying start.

#Comminution25

Thursday 4 January 2024

Recent comments

There have been comments on the following postings since the last update:

Memories of IMPC 2003 Cape Town: the Gala Dinner
Prof. Ronald Woods, 1934-2023: a flotation legend
Prof. Fathi Habashi: 1928-2023
October Cornish Mining Sundowner: addressing the skills shortage in the mining industry

Memories of our journey to Cape Town in 1969
New book: Handbook of Recycling
Return to Chingola
Tuesday at Flotation '23
Thursday at Flotation '23
Return to Nchanga, Zambia's greatest copper mine
Much to celebrate at the Christmas Cornish Mining Sundowner
2023 with MEI: Business as normal

We welcome and encourage your comments on blog postings (see also the posting of 2nd April 2019). If you do not have a Google account, the simplest way to add a comment is by selecting 'anonymous' as your profile, but please leave your name and affiliation in the comment. Alternatively, email your comment directly to bwills@min-eng.com.
The blog regularly receives around 20,000 views per month, so interacting with comments enhances your international presence by providing you, and your company or Institute, with valuable exposure.
 If you are in Web View (mobile users can access this by scrolling down to the bottom of the screen) you can also check various things in the right hand column:
  • The most viewed posts in the last 7 days, month and year
  • Dates of blog posts (click on the black arrows to open up individual months and postings)
  • Labels, or categories
You can also access MEI's Facebook page via the link in this column.
If you would like a weekly email alert to comments on the blog, please let me know via bwills@min-eng.com.

Monday 1 January 2024

Summary of December and welcome to 2024

The UN's latest round of global climate talks, COP28, this year hosted on the first two weeks of December by the UAE in Dubai, aimed at helping limit the long-term global temperature rise to 1.5C, which the UN's climate science body says is crucial to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. That will require, however, drastic cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, a 43% reduction by 2030 from 2019 levels, according to the UN. Around 100 countries promised to treble the renewable energy the world uses by 2030. However, there will be no penalties for missing targets and the promises are not binding.

Addressing the delegates from almost 200 countries, UN Secretary-General António Guterres announced his plan to set up a panel aimed to ensure the move from fossil fuels towards renewable energy is just, sustainable and benefits all countries. He said that the availability and accessibility of critical energy transition minerals is crucial to reach the goals set by the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The conference closed with agreement on a new deal. For the first time, the deal calls on all countries to move away from using fossil fuels - but not to phase them out, something many governments wanted. 

The COP28 president said nations had "confronted realities and... set the world in the right direction" and he emphasised the importance of the pledge to treble renewable energy capacity by 2030, and a fund set up for rich nations to give money to poor nations suffering the impacts of climate change.

Although the deal is only to move away, rather than phase out, fossil fuel, with the eyes of the world watching countries will maybe think twice now before building new coal fired power stations.

Back home, the first of the Christmas 'dos" was the annual Camborne School of Mines Association Christmas lunch at Tyacks in Camborne. Very well attended by past students and staff it was a pleasure to share a table with two of my former students, Dr. Dave Dew, who graduated in mineral processing in 1979, and Kirk Adams, a mining graduate from 1985 who has now converted to mineral processing, and the two current CSM co-Presidents Bess Mann and Codi-Lilli Brooks. Bess and Codi are currently MSc students at CSM, Bess in mineral processing and Codi mining engineering. 

Barbara with Kirk and Codi
With Bess and Dave

The following week we were at the Truro Museum for the Cornish Lithium Christmas party, attended by an interesting mix of people, mainly from the Cornish mining industry. 

Barbara with Claire Yelland, Jane Isaacs and Pauline Clarke

It was a good opportunity to congratulate the company on its outstanding achievement award at the Resourcing Tomorrow event in November, in recognition of its exploration success (see posting of December 22nd). At the same event Cornwall was awarded the prize for the most improved mining destination worldwide and Cornish Lithium Founder and CEO Jeremy Wrathall had the honour, on behalf of Cornwall Council, of presenting the award to Glenn Caplin-Grey, CEO of the Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Local Enterprise Partnership.

Jeremy and Glenn

Two days later we were in Cornwall's most iconic fishing village, Mousehole, to view their always spectacular harbour lights.

Then on the following week it was the last social gathering before Christmas, the annual Cornish Mining Sundowner at Tyacks in Camborne.

On behalf of the MEI team I wish you all a happy and prosperous 2024 and we look forward to seeing some of you at one of the four MEI Conferences this year. We may also catch up in the USA in September for the International Mineral Processing Congress, the first since the congress in Moscow in 2018. But before all that, I will be in USA next month for the SME Annual Meeting in Phoenix, so look out for me there if you are attending.