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North sets Ferrexpo on a course for ‘carbon neutrality’

Ferrexpo is used to setting trends. It was the first company to launch a new open-pit iron ore mine in the CIS since Ukraine gained its independence in 1991 and has recently become the first miner in Ukraine to adopt autonomous open-pit drilling and haulage technology.

It plans to keep up this innovative streak if a conversation with Acting CEO Jim North is anything to go by.

North, former Chief Operating Officer of London Mining and Ferrexpo, has seen the technology shift in mining first-hand. A holder of a variety of senior operational management roles in multiple commodities with Rio Tinto and BHP, he witnessed the take-off of autonomous haulage systems (AHS) in the Pilbara, as well as the productivity and operating cost benefits that came with removing operators from blasthole drills.

He says the rationale for adopting autonomous technology at Ferrexpo’s Yeristovo mine is slightly different to the traditional Pilbara investment case.

“This move was not based on reduction in salaries; it was all based on utilisation of capital,” North told IM. While miners receive comparatively good salaries in Ukraine, they cannot compete with the wages of those Pilbara haul truck drivers.

Ferrexpo Acting CEO, Jim North

North provided a bit of background here: “The focus for the last six years since I came into the company was about driving mining efficiencies and getting benchmark performance out of our mining fleet. This is not rocket science; it is all about carrying out good planning and executing to that plan.”

The company used the same philosophy in its process plant – a philosophy that is likely to see it produce close to 12 Mt of high grade (65% Fe) iron ore pellets and concentrate next year.

Using his industry knowledge, North pitted Ferrexpo’s fleet performance against others on the global stage.

“Mining is a highly capital-intensive business and that equipment you buy has got be moving – either loaded or empty – throughout the day,” North said. “24 hours-a-day operation is impossible as you must put fuel in vehicles and you need to change operators, so, in the beginning, we focused on increasing the utilised hours. After a couple of years, I noticed we were getting very close to the benchmark performance globally set by the majors.

“If you are looking at pushing your utilisation further, it inevitably leads you to automation.”

Ferrexpo was up for pushing it further and, four years ago, started the process of going autonomous, with its Yeristovo iron ore mine, opened in 2011, the first candidate for an operational shakeup.

“Yeristovo is a far simpler configuration from a mining point of view,” North explained. “It is basically just a large box cut. Poltava, on the other hand (its other iron ore producing mine currently), has been around for 50 years; it is a very deep and complex operation.

“We thought the place to dip our toe into the water and get good at autonomy was Yeristovo.”

This started off in 2017 with deployment of teleremote operation on its Epiroc Pit Viper 275 blasthole drill rigs. The company has gradually increased the level of autonomy, progressing to remotely operating these rigs from a central control room. In 2021-2022, these rigs will move to fully-autonomous mode, North says.

Ferrexpo has also been leveraging remotely-operated technology for mine site surveying, employing drones to speed up and improve the accuracy of the process. The miner has invested in three of these drones to carry out not only site surveys, but stockpile mapping and – perhaps next year – engineering inspections.

“The productivity benefits from these drones are huge,” North said. “In just two days of drone operation, you can carry out the same amount of work it would take three or four surveyors to do in one or two weeks!”

OEM-agnostic solution

It is the haul truck segment of the mine automation project at Yeristovo that has caught the most industry attention, with Ferrexpo one of the first to choose an OEM-agnostic solution from a company outside of the big four open-pit mining haul truck manufacturers.

The company settled on a solution from ASI Mining, owned 34% by Epiroc, after the completion of a trial of the Mobius® Haulage A.I. system on a Cat 793D last year.

The first phase of the commercial project is already kicking off, with the first of six Cat 793s converted to autonomous mode now up and running at Yeristovo. On completion of this first phase of six trucks, consideration will be given to timing of further deployment for the remainder of the Yeristovo truck fleet.

This trial and rollout may appear fairly routine, but behind the scenes was an 18-month process to settle on ASI’s solution.

“For us, as a business, we have about 86 trucks deployed on site,” North said. “We simply couldn’t take the same route BHP or Rio took three or four years ago in acquiring an entirely new autonomous fleet. At that point, Cat and Komatsu were the only major OEMs offering these solutions and they were offering limited numbers of trucks models with no fleet integration possibilities.

“If you had a mixed fleet – which we do – then you were looking at a multi-hundred-million-dollar decision to change out your mining fleet. That is prohibitive for a business like ours.”

Ferrexpo personnel visited ASI Mining’s facility in Utah, USA, several times, hearing all about the parent company’s work with NASA on robotics. “We knew they had the technical capability to work in tough environments,” North remarked.

“We also saw work they had been doing with Ford and Toyota for a number of years on their unmanned vehicles, and we witnessed the object detect and collision avoidance solutions in action on a test track.”

Convinced by these demonstrations and with an eye to the future of its operations, Ferrexpo committed to an OEM-agnostic autonomous future.

“If we want to get to a fully autonomous fleet at some stage in the future, we will need to pick a provider that could turn any unit into an autonomous vehicle,” North said. It found that in ASI Mining’s Mobius platform.

Such due diligence is representative not only of the team’s thorough approach to this project, it also reflects the realities of deploying such a solution in Ukraine.

“It is all about building capability,” North said. “This is new technology in Ukraine – it’s not like you can go down the road and find somebody that has worked on this type of technology before. As a result, it’s all about training and building up the capacity in our workforce.”

After this expertise has been established, the automation rollout will inevitably accelerate.

“Once we have Yeristovo fully autonomous, we intend to move the autonomy program to Belanovo, which we started excavating a couple of years ago,” North said. “The last pit we would automate would be Poltava, purely due to complexity.”

Belanovo, which has a JORC Mineral Resource of 1,700 Mt, is currently mining overburden with 30-40 t ADTs shifting this material. While ASI Mining said it would be able to automate such machines, North decided the automation program will only begin when large fleet is deployed.

“When we deploy large fleet at Belanovo and start to move significant volumes, we intend for it to become a fully-autonomous operation,” he said.

Poltava, which is a single pit covering a 7 km long by 2 km wide area (pictured below), has a five-decade-long history and a more diverse mining fleet than Yeristovo. In this respect, it was always going to be harder to automate from a loading and haulage point of view.

“If you think about the fleet numbers deployed when Belanovo is running, we will probably have 50% of our fleet running autonomously,” North said. “The level of capability to run that level of technology would be high, so it makes sense to take on the more complex operation at Poltava at that point in time.”

Consolidation and decarbonisation

This autonomy transition has also given North and his team the chance to re-evaluate its fleet needs for now and in the future.

This is not as simple as it may sound to those thinking of a typical Pilbara AHS fleet deployment, with the Yeristovo and Poltava mines containing different ore types that require blending at the processing plant in order to sustain a cost-effective operation able to produce circa-12 Mt/y of high-grade (65%-plus Fe) iron ore pellets and concentrate.

“That limits our ability in terms of fleet size for ore mining because we want to match the capacity of the fleet to the different ore streams we feed into the plant,” North said.

This has seen the company standardise on circa-220 t trucks for ore movement and 300-320 t trucks for waste haulage.

On the latter, North explained: “That is about shovel utilisation, not necessarily about trucks. If you go much larger than that 320-t truck, you are talking about the need to use large rope shovels and we don’t have enough consistent stripping requirements for that. We think the 800 t-class electric hydraulic excavator is a suitable match for the circa-320 t truck.”

This standardisation process at Poltava has seen BELAZ 40 t trucks previously working in the pit re-assigned for auxiliary work, with the smallest in-pit Cat 777 trucks acting as fuel, water and lubrication service vehicles at Poltava.

“The Cat 785s are the smallest operating primary fleet we have at Poltava,” North said. “We also have the Hitachi EH3500s and Cat 789s and Cat 793s, tending to keep the bigger fleet towards Yeristovo and the smaller fleet at Poltava.”

In carrying out this evaluation, the company has also plotted its next electrification steps.

“Given we have got to the point where we know we want 220 t for ore and 300-320 t nominally for waste at Yeristovo, we have a very clear understanding of where we are going in our efforts to support our climate action,” North said.

Electrification of the company’s entire operation – both the power generation and pelletising segment, and the mobile fleet – forms a significant part of its carbon reduction plans.

A 5 MW solar farm is being built to trial the efficacy of photovoltaic generation in the region, while, in the pelletiser, the company is blending sunflower husks with natural gas to power the process. Fine tuning over the past few years has seen the company settle on a 30:70 sunflower husk:natural gas energy ratio, allowing the company to make the most of a waste product in plentiful supply in Ukraine.

On top of this, the company is recuperating heat from the pelletisation process where possible and reusing it for other processes.

With a significant amount of ‘blue’ (nuclear) or ‘green’ (renewable) power available through the grid and plans to incorporate renewables on site, Ferrexpo looks to have the input part of the decarbonisation equation covered.

In the pellet lines, North says green hydrogen is believed to be the partial or full displacement solution for gas firing, with the company keenly watching developments such as the HYBRIT project in Sweden.

On the diesel side of things, Ferrexpo is also charting its decarbonisation course. This will start with a move to electric drive haul trucks in the next few years.

Power infrastructure is already available in the pits energising most of its electric-hydraulic shovels and backhoes, and the intention is for these new electric drive trucks to go on trolley line infrastructure to eradicate some of the operation’s diesel use.

“Initially we would still need to rely on diesel engines at the end of ramps and the bottom of pits, but our intention is to utilise some alternative powerpack on these trucks as the technology becomes available,” North said.

He expects that alternative powerpack to be battery-based, but he and the company are keeping their options open during conversations with OEMs about the fleet replacement plans.

“We know we are going to have to buy a fleet in the next couple of years, but the problem is when you make that sort of purchase, you are committing to using those machines for the next 20 years,” North said. “During all our conversations with OEMs we are recognising that we will need to buy a fleet before they have probably finalised their ‘decarbonised’ solutions, so all the contracts are based on the OEM providing that fully carbon-free solution when it becomes available.”

With around 15% of the company’s carbon footprint tied to diesel use, this could have a big impact on Ferrexpo’s ‘green’ credentials, yet the transition to trolley assist makes sense even without this sustainability benefit.

“The advantages in terms of mining productivity are huge,” North said. “You go from 15 km/h on ramp to just under 30 km/h on ramp.”

This is not all North offered up on the company’s carbon reduction plans.

At both of Ferrexpo’s operations, the company moves a lot of ore internally with shuttle trains, some of which are powered by diesel engines. A more environmentally friendly alternative is being sought for these locomotives.

“We are working with rail consultants that are delivering solutions for others to ‘fast follow’ that sector,” North said referencing the project already underway with Vale at its operations in Brazil. “We are investigating at the moment how we could design and deploy the solution at our operations for a lithium-ion battery loco.”

Not all the company’s decarbonisation and energy-efficiency initiatives started as recently as the last few years.

When examining a plan to reach 12 Mt/y of iron ore pellet production, North and his team looked at the whole ‘mine to mill’ approach.

“The cheapest place to optimise your comminution of rock is within the mine itself,” North said. “If you can optimise your blasting and get better fragmentation in the pit, you are saving energy, wear on materials, etc and you are doing some of the job of the concentrator and comminution process in the mine.”

A transition to a full emulsion blasting product came out of this study, and a move from NONEL detonators to electronic detonators could follow in the forthcoming years.

“That also led us into thinking about the future crusher – where we want to put it, what materials to feed into the expanded plant in the future, and what blending ratio we want to have from the pits,” North said. “The problem with pit development in a business that is moving 150-200 Mt of material a year is the crusher location needs to change as the mining horizons change.”

It ended up becoming a tradeoff between placing a new crusher in the pit on an assigned bench or putting it on top of the bench and hauling ore to that location.

The favoured location looks like being within the pit, according to North.

“It will be a substantial distance away from where our existing facility at Poltava is and we will convey the material into the plant,” he said. “We did the tradeoff study between hauling with trains/trucks, or conveying and, particularly for Belanovo, we need to take that ore to the crusher from the train network we already have in place.”

These internal ‘green’ initiatives are representative of the products Ferrexpo is supplying the steel industry.

Having shifted away from lower grade pellets to a higher-grade product in the past five years and started to introduce direct reduced iron pellet products to the market with trial shipments, Ferrexpo is looking to be a major player in the ‘green steel’ value chain.

North says as much.

“We are getting very close to understanding our path forward and our journey to carbon neutrality.”

Dyno Nobel satisfies surface blast design requirements with EZshot EZDet series

Dyno Nobel, a leader in commercial explosives, has released its EZshot® EZDet (EZD) series for surface blasting.

These new units consist of a green shock tube with a surface detonator attached to one end and a high-strength (#12) in-hole electronic detonator on the other, Dyno Nobel says. The surface detonator is set inside of a color-coded plastic EZ™ Connector block to facilitate easy connections to shock tube leads and can hold up to six shock tube leads.

Easy-to-read, colour-coded delay tags display the delay number and nominal firing time prominently to ensure ease-of-use, the company added.

Units can be easily connected to one another to satisfy basic blast design requirements in quarry, mining and construction operations, according to Dyno Nobel. They can also be used in combination with NONEL®MS, NONEL EZTL™ and/or NONEL TD detonators for complex blast design requirements and to minimise inventory of initiation system components.

Dyno Nobel takes aim at underground mine development challenges with EZshot

“Companies traditionally see mine development as a means to an end. You just want to get it done to get to the ore.”

Paul Klaric, Technical Manager at DynoConsult, Dyno Nobel’s specialist consulting division, is right. Mine development is all about metres per day/month. The accuracy of the drill and blast patterns, or the stability of the drives that are created, rarely feature in quarterly updates or investor presentations.

Yet, this short-term thinking – typically related to the need to improve a project’s payback period – is costing the industry millions of dollars of sustaining capital.

Dyno Nobel Vice President, Product and Applications Technology, David Gribble, explains: “There are some applications where you carry out this development and you come back a few years later and look to either rehabilitate or create new drives off of it.”

In underground mines with challenging ground conditions where drilling and blasting practices are lacklustre, this can create safety concerns.

“Companies are trying to mitigate any safety issues by working to remove people through automation and technologies such as wireless initiation – which is great – but we are of the opinion that part of the reason for these technologies is that the drives were damaged in the first place,” Gribble told IM. “If we can create competent drives with minimal damage from the off, then a lot of the issues that happen down the track – which we’re trying to mitigate against – should go away.”

This is where the company’s EZshot® electronic detonator comes into the mine development equation.

Offering users the benefits of accurate electronic timing without the complications that come with wired systems, EZshot has been designed with underground perimeter blasting in mind.

Utilising shock tube for signal transmission which Dyno Nobel has been producing since the 1970s, EZshot comes in a new colour with the same J-hook connection as NONEL, meaning no new training is required.

Factory-programmed delay times can range from 1,000 to 20,000 milliseconds, with long-period delay timing ideal for underground perimeter blasting, according to the company. This is helped by the electronic initiation unit inside the detonator, which eliminates scatter – an inherent property of traditional pyrotechnic systems, to ensure firing occurs at the pre-designated delay time (see video below).

These design elements all help confront the issue of overbreak in perimeter blasting, according to Klaric.

“A good measure of well controlled, smooth blasting is when you see ‘half barrels’ left behind, which are remnants of the holes that were blasted in the rock mass,” he told IM. This is sometimes witnessed in competent, homogeneous rock masses, but rarely spotted in poor, challenging ground where there is faulting, jointing or discontinuities.

“In such ground, there is greater potential for overbreak and damage after perimeter blasting,” Klaric said.

Gas from the explosives can be forced into the rock mass behind the blast design profile, he said, which can become a real hazard and precondition the ground.

Klaric explained: “Your profile might come out as designed, but there could be more damage beyond the perimeter. As you go to install your ground support, there is potentially an area of the drive where the ground support is going to prove ineffective.”

It is these challenging rock conditions where EZshot could provide the most value to miners, according to the company.

In fact, in trials at an underground mine where variable ground conditions and temperatures were observed, a 12% overall reduction (from 22% to 10%) in overbreak was observed with a switch from NONEL LP to EZshot detonators.

Operators witnessed visible half barrels in poor ground where they had never seen them and full profile half barrels in good ground during these trials, Dyno Nobel reported.

The benefits did not end there.

There was a measurable reduction in the volume of material scaled off the walls after using EZShot – thanks to the improved blasting profile – and initial calculations indicated a positive $/m benefit to development mining costs, according to the company.

Drill and blast overbreak reconciliation is another benefit of EZshot, Gribble says.

“When you just use pyrotechnic detonators, you are likely to break past the perimeter and then you have no idea of where you drilled,” he explained. “How do you then improve something you cannot measure?

“In a lot of cases, EZshot will tell you exactly where you drilled and if the perimeter holes were in or out of design. You can then look to improve from there.”

This could have positive knock-on effects for the rest of the development cycle – not just in terms of speed, but also cost.

“If you are starting to improve and get consistency in your blasting and the drives you are delivering, you can start to consider adapting your rock support measures,” Klaric said.

For example, removing six or seven roof bolts per heading due to the improved blasting profile could see costs drop by A$3,000-4,000 ($1,958-2,610) per heading, he explained.

“It’s going to take time, but the potential is there for consistent results throughout the whole mine life cycle and to look at the drilling and blasting procedure at a much more forensic level,” he said.

While these benefits are applicable in all forms of mine development, it is long-life operations that are set to reap the most rewards from a switch to EZshot.

“This could be your block cave, or panel cave type of operations where some of those drives might be in place for 30-50 years,” Klaric said. “If you get development right in these applications, everything else will be right down the line.”

This means the South American copper industry – one that is progressively moving underground as operations mature – could be a potential market for EZShot. There are also a few famous block cave mines in Asia that could reap some serious value out of the product.

For the time being, the company is focused on further trials, which will provide the statistical firepower to get more miners to notice the product’s potential.

In Queensland, it has recently managed to conduct a few trial blasts, despite COVID-19 restrictions.

And, in Western Australia, EZshot has made an appearance at Silver Lake Resources’ Mount Monger gold operations, helping the company with the portal breakthrough at its newest mine, Santa (pictured, left. Photo courtesy of Silver Lake Resources).

It has also trialled and used the product in the US and Canada, according to Dirk Van Soelen, Vice President of Initiating Systems Technology at Incitec Pivot, Dyno Nobel’s parent company.

Even during these testing times where travel is restricted, there is potential for further trials thanks to the product’s ease of use.

Van Soelen said: “Normally when you bring new technology in, you have to support the technology to the hilt.

“There is an element of that in EZshot as you want to get the measurements and feedback from case studies, but the beauty with it is you can send someone a box and they can use it tomorrow in the same way they use their current product.

“It is a seamless technology transition from the user’s perspective.”

Van Soelen concluded: “I think a big part of the appeal of EZShot comes from the fact that you get ease-of-use and repeatability with this product.

“This repeatability, from blast to blast, takes the emphasis off the blasting procedure and provides the opportunity to look at many other potential savings and efficiencies within the other processes.”

Dyno Nobel initiates EZshot detonator launch

Dyno Nobel has launched the newest addition to its electronic initiation portfolio, the EZshot®.

This technology offers users the benefits of accurate electronic timing with the ease of use of the NONEL® shock tube, the company says.

“The EZshot detonator series is an exclusive design for underground perimeter blasting. This system gives the customer the ability to use electronic timing for improved perimeter control, helping them to save on time and overall production costs,” Dyno Nobel said.

“With the same J-Hook hookup as NONEL, no new training is required, allowing the customer to quickly move forward on all projects.”

The electronic detonator, EZshot LP, has a high-strength detonator in a heavy walled copper shell with an electronic circuit board timing chip providing precision and accuracy.

“The smart chip technology in the detonator delivers the timing needed that cannot be reached with tradition non-electric detonators,” the company said.

The electronic detonator comes in factory-programmed delay times, ranging from 1,100 to 8,000 milliseconds, with the long period delay timing ideal for underground perimeter blasting, it says.

The EZshot LP shock tube is identical to the trusted and familiar NONEL LP shock tube Dyno Nobel has been producing since the 1970s, in a new colour.

“This reliable design had stood the test of time and blasters will be familiar with the J-hook connection, virtually eliminating additional training time. EZshot LP takes advantage of the shock tube system allowing wireless communication from initiation to detonation,” the company said.