Keeping Projects on the Rails

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
J Canterford
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
7
File Size:
151 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 8, 2011

Abstract

Although we have access to a wide range of sophisticated process design and improvement tools in combination with a significant range of case studies, the mineral resource industry still manages to be plagued by the negative publicity surrounding operating plant failures because they were neither smart nor safe, together with proposed projects that fail at the first or second hurdle. The general public and the finance industry are generally totally uniformed about projects that ramp-up to name plate capacity on time and on budget and even more so when ahead of schedule and under budget. As the saying goes, good news does not cut the mustard.The following is a summary of the author’s sometimes jaundiced view about why metallurgical plants do not live up to their technical and commercial expectations. In no way should the summary be construed as a negative reflection on the skills of the metallurgical profession. Rather, it is to be taken as a positive acknowledgement of those skills and is intended to highlight some of the major considerations that need to be assessed as a potential project transforms into a sustainable technical and commercial reality.While a considerable portion of the summary is directed at developing hydrometallurgical flowsheets, the general principles are equally important to all aspects of extractive metallurgy.For convenience, the summary covers the following five basic discussion points – project, people, process, patents and politicians.
Citation

APA: J Canterford  (2011)  Keeping Projects on the Rails

MLA: J Canterford Keeping Projects on the Rails. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2011.

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