The “Mill Redesign Project” at INCO’s Clarabelle Mill (54ceb038-1593-4f87-9a10-6e2a572d48df)

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 418 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
"Improving mill grade recovery relationships is always good business. INCO’s Clarabelle Mill has just undergone a $16 million process upgrade that was designed to improve nickel recovery by 2%. The “Mill Redesign Project” was completed on time, under budget and delivered the promised improvement in recoveries.This paper describes the methodology of the Mill Redesign Team, details of the process improvements and the critical success factors that helped the team deliver on its promises.With a payback of under one year, the Mill Redesign Project will play a key role in ensuring a competitive edge as INCO embarks on its second century of operation.INTRODUCTIONIt is not uncommon in milling operations to encounter a crisis. That is the point when the process does not behave as expected and fails to respond to the increasingly desperate efforts of the metallurgists and operators. Flowsheet and process changes are attempted and abandoned. With luck, one or more of the changes achieves some mitigation of the original problem or more usually, the original cause of the problem disappears. Regardless, the metallurgist can sit back and bask in the apparent success of his or her endeavours.Less common is when a problem is carefully diagnosed, a team put together to explore all avenues and recommend a path of action that is implemented on time, on budget and immediately delivers on the promises which are sustained over time. This is one such story. It is the story of the Mill Redesign Project at INCO’s Clarabelle Mill in Copper Cliff, Ontario.BACKGROUNDThe Clarabelle Mill was built in 1971 on the southern rim of the Sudbury basin. At that time it was one of four mills operated by INCO in the Sudbury area. During the 1970’s, 80’s and 90’s, the need for increased process efficiency, higher levels of sulphur rejection to tails and the concurrent development of high capacity mills and flotation cells, resulted in the consolidation of INCO’s Sudbury area milling operations into a single, expanded facility at Clarabelle."
Citation
APA:
(2003) The “Mill Redesign Project” at INCO’s Clarabelle Mill (54ceb038-1593-4f87-9a10-6e2a572d48df)MLA: The “Mill Redesign Project” at INCO’s Clarabelle Mill (54ceb038-1593-4f87-9a10-6e2a572d48df). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2003.