Tag Archives: Rävliden

Boliden’s sustainable metals supply strategy on show at Rävliden

Boliden is used to setting the standard in mining, and its latest innovation leap focused on electrification at the Rävliden mine in northern Sweden is another example of it leading from the front.

The Sweden-based company has a vision of being the most climate-friendly and respected metal provider in the world, and, from what IM witnessed and heard last month during a visit to the extension of the Kristineberg mine, Rävliden, it is well on its way to doing that.

The group climate targets that were validated and approved by the Science Based Targets initiative at the back end of 2023 – reducing absolute CO2e Scope 1 & 2 emissions by 42% in 2030 from the 2021 baseline among these – are important markers for Boliden, but what is even more impressive is the actions being taken on the ground to hit these.

Among them are the addition of numerous battery-electric vehicles into the underground operating fleets in the mines within the Boliden Area and Garpenberg, the open-pit trolley assist achievements made with diesel-electric drive trucks at Aitik and Kevitsa and, at the Smelting divisions, major investments in recycling. This is underpinned by energy inputs that are from predominantly fossil fuel-free grids or with captive green energy supply.

This has allowed the company to establish Green Transition Metals (GTM): a portfolio of recycled and low-carbon metals that it sells on the market and act as a key differentiator in the commodity space. To this point, these products have allowed the company to access forms of finance unavailable to competitors lacking such green credentials.

The philosophy behind this tangible example of sustainable commodity supply has been felt upstream and downstream of Boliden HQ, as confirmed by Patrik Westerlund, Boliden Senior Development Engineer.

Westerlund is responsible for the underground truck trolley project at Rävliden and says he has felt the backing and involvement of management at every turn of the project.

“Whenever reporting on progress on the project, I have felt support from management,” he told IM. “Innovation is encouraged from the top down at Boliden.”

Battery truck trolley first

In 2021, the company outlined a SEK1.25 billion ($123 million) investment at Kristineberg towards further developing the mine towards the Rävliden mineralisation. This expansion was expected to contribute to an increase in milled volumes in the Boliden Area to 1.8 Mt/y.

A satellite deposit close to Kristineberg – which, itself, has been operating since the 1940s – Rävliden constitutes a sub-vertical to steeply south-dipping, 5-25-m wide and 150-m high mineralised lens, or system of lenses, with a length extent of at least 900 m along plunge. The mineralisation at Rävliden is broadly of a similar character to Kristineberg although is amenable to both long-hole stoping and transversal open stoping – as opposed to the cut and fill mining and drift and fill mining methods utilised to mine the mineralised material underground at Kristineberg.

Exploration of the Rävliden mineralisation has resulted, to date, in 8.4 Mt of inferred and indicated mineral resources. The deposit contains copper, zinc, lead, silver and gold, with mining rates of 800,000 t/y making for a 10-year operation.

Where the project gets very intriguing – and the reason for IM’s visit – is in the company’s haulage plan.

Where Kristineberg uses a 160 t/h skip hoist to get the crushed ore to surface, Rävliden is expecting to transport its ore, waste, concrete and personnel using a 5.6-km ramp stretching from surface to 750 meters underground, at an average incline of 1:7.

This will represent a world-first battery-trolley operation, which the company is already proving out via an 800-m trolley test track – also a world first.

Back in April, Boliden, Epiroc and ABB passed a new technology milestone by successfully deploying the first fully battery-electric truck trolley system on this test track, which boasts a 14% incline as well as a curve with a 35-m-long radius.

IM, during late August, witnessed one of these fully loaded Epiroc battery-electric Minetruck MT42 SG Trolley trucks in operation at the mine, along with the supporting infrastructure supplied by ABB and others. The on-board truck infrastructure includes ABB’s DC-DC converter, HES880 inverters and AMXE motors to enhance the power of the machine, while there are off-board rectifier substations for the track. The ABB Ability™ System 800xA® was also showcased during the visit, which monitors and controls the electrical system. In addition, Siemens provided on-board hardware for the MT42 SG Trolley truck.

The truck features a trolley pantograph connected to an overhead catenary line, which is similar in makeup to an on-road electric highway application.

During the visit, ABB highlighted how its solution had been customised and tweaked to work within the regulations and safety standards in Sweden, as well as Boliden’s own site requirements.

Epiroc also showcased how its battery-electric Minetruck MT42 SG has been adapted to work on trolley; the most obvious adaptation being the use of three battery subpacks as opposed to the standard five subpacks the battery-only machine is normally equipped with. The removal of 40% of battery power was justified to make room for the on-board DC-DC converter, as well as the reduction in power required to operate on the trolley line – as is currently envisaged, the trucks will only run on battery power alone for a circa-0.9 km stretch of the 5.6-km ramp.

Franck Boudreault, Epiroc’s Underground Application Expert Electrification, remarked on the economic benefits of running off grid-backed trolley power, compared with battery power alone. The OEM’s modelling also indicated the batteries on board would benefit from a substantial uplift in life due to the comparatively “light duty” application they would have while on trolley. This increased longevity would translate to reduced operating costs over the mine’s lifetime.

BEV loader first

As if the battery-trolley first was not enough for one project, Rävliden also became the first mine to automate stope loading with a battery-electric LHD – the Epiroc Scooptram ST18 SG – late last year at Rävliden. This is on top of commissioning ABC Total on an Epiroc Simba M6 longhole production rig at the operation. ABC Total allows for a full round of holes to be drilled automatically, according to Epiroc.

The miner’s ambitions go beyond this, though, with plans to automate the fleet of Minetruck MT42 SG Trolley trucks running on the ramp. The ‘concrete’ nature of these plans is evidenced by the fact Boliden has already built a loading station adapted for automation underground at Rävliden, as well as the moves to install an above-ground remote operations station later.

There is plenty more to this mine, which produced first concentrate last year, than ramp haulage.

The circa-$120 million investment also covers an underground crusher – a Metso Nordberg® C160 jaw crusher – a ventilation plant built with heat exchangers for increased efficiency and sustainability, a truck loading station, workshop and pumping stations.

The automated loaders carry blasted material from the stopes to either ore passes or loading pockets. Material is either directly loaded from the bottom of ore passes into the crusher at -750 m or by using MT42 SG trucks to transport material from loading pockets to the crusher. From the crusher, the material is transported by conveyors to loading chutes. These chutes feed crushed ore to the MT42 SG Trolley trucks, which move up the ramp and dump on surface. Ore is then trucked circa-90 km to the Boliden Area Operations Process Plant for beneficiation by flotation, before further processing the concentrate to a final product at the Rönnskär smelter, 65 km away.

The electrical infrastructure to support a complete fleet of electric vehicles and mobile equipment is also part of this, as Westerlund and his colleague Frida Pettersson (Project Manager at Rävliden) confirmed.

In a brief presentation on these plans, Westerlund outlined a fleet that included three battery-electric LHDs, three battery-electric trucks, four battery-trolley trucks, two “construction” battery-electric trucks, two electric light loaders and 12 “mining machines” that are also due to be battery-electric.

Battery-powered machines already ordered and/or delivered include two Epiroc Boomer E20 SG Battery drills, two Epiroc Boltec E10 SG Battery bolters, one Jama battery-powered SBU8000E underground scaler (using an Epiroc battery solution underpinned by Northvolt batteries), three Epiroc Scooptram ST18 SG LHDs, two MT42 SG trucks and the four MT42 SG Trolley trucks.

Westerlund admitted question marks remained over whether Rävliden would be able to source a full-electric fleet in the next few years, explaining that the company has had to employ diesel equipment where it cannot currently obtain the ‘green’ alternatives. He was hopeful there would be a proliferation of battery-electric integrated tool carriers in the near term – outside of the diesel-to-battery conversions available in relatively small quantities in Australia – as well as battery-electric material transport trucks from the likes of Scania. He also saw mass produced battery-electric pick-ups coming.

Haulage to surface and underground load and haul activities represent over 85% of diesel and CO2 emissions at the project, according to Westerlund, meaning the big emission wins are within reach.

All these machines could come together for a mixed battery-electric autonomy first, with Epiroc the likely integrator in this scenario – similar to what the OEM has achieved with a mainly diesel-powered fleet at the Cadia operation, in Australia, in partnership with MacLean.

This is the current plan, but there is some flexibility being built into the mining operations at Rävliden. Westerlund and Pettersson, for instance, said the ventilation plant had been sized for a bigger operation, with expectations that exploration will reveal more resources to justify higher mining rates.

Commercial appeal

With Boliden committing to this battery-trolley haulage scenario, it opens the question: how big a market is there for such a solution going forward?

There were several attendees from major and mid-tier mining companies on this trip, indicating interest is high. At least one mining contractor and some smaller consulting/engineering companies also joined the delegation in Sweden.

There were questions put to Westerlund and Pettersson from this community about whether the same throughput could be achieved via a hoisting operation. In response, Westerlund referred to the obvious fact that the planned haulage route meant the company could reuse the current industrial area and leave a very limited footprint on surface at Rävliden.

A Jama battery-powered SBU8000E underground scaler in operation

The battery-only haulage question came up too, but the 1:7 average incline of the ramp would likely require a significant number of battery swaps and/or charges during normal operation.

Boliden is in a very good position to enact this plan, being blessed with a significant amount of renewable power at Rävliden, expertise with battery-electric machines and the required electrical infrastructure thanks to previous trials and vehicle acquisitions, previous experience of underground trolley via Kiruna truck deployments at Kristineberg and elsewhere, and confidence in the expansion of its orebody.

While not in a unique position, there are only a few companies and operations that have all these factors going for them.

This will inevitably play into Epiroc’s plan to commercialise the MT42 SG Trolley system, and ABB’s own supporting electric infrastructure.

Boudreault said there were several criteria Epiroc wanted to tick off with the test track at Rävliden to highlight the commercial business case, including:

  • Demonstrating the ability to manage energy in a smart way on trolley;
  • Benchmarking the cost per tonne of such an operation; and
  • Showcasing the potential productivity benefits.

“We very much see this proof of concept with Boliden as the ‘ice breaker’ in terms of battery-trolley haulage potential,” he said.

Those who visit the mine in 2025 will likely see the commercial operation of the 4.7-km trolley line, gaining an understanding that goes beyond the proof of concept, but Boudreault said the significant speed on ramp boost, improved cycle time and ability to deploy less trucks in such a haulage operation would prove enticing for starters.

“At the same time, we are aware that the right partners will be needed to make any new installation a success,” he explained, adding that ABB’s input may be sought again for such a deployment.

This is before considering the local electrical standards that such an operation would be guided by, plus any other safety-related regulations that would need consideration.

“All of these will be factored into trade-off studies that are specific to that operation and the company’s own requirements,” Boudreault said, adding that, on paper, an operation with a 5-10 year mine life was likely required to make a battery-trolley operation economically work.

Leading from the front

The involvement of Swedish innovation agency Vinnova and its initiative ‘Sustainable Industry’ – which includes some financing for the project – will undoubtedly have helped get such a project off the ground at Rävliden, yet don’t discount the ingredients Boliden can call on to create the ideal mix for such innovation.

More so than any other mining company, Boliden has integrated sustainability at every point of the supply chain.

It has been using an internal carbon price to make investment decisions at all its operations for over a decade; it has embedded recycling into its thinking, becoming one of the first miners to leverage smelting capacity to process such material; it has implemented nitrate-free and environmentally friendly explosives at some of its operations (Kankberg being one); and it has also embedded mill lining recycling into its activities at Aitik.

That’s before mentioning its feats in the mining equipment automation space, an arena the company feels will pair well with electrification to deliver more than the sum of their parts in the future.

Many of these feats have been facilitated by the renowned Nordic mining equipment, technology and service space, which has allowed the company to access and implement the solutions at a suitable pace.

Not all miners demand respect from their peers and stakeholders, and even fewer can claim to be ‘climate-friendly’. Boliden can argue it ticks both boxes.

Epiroc whets the electrification appetite for MINExpo 2024

Less than a month out from MINExpo INTERNATIONAL 2024 in Las Vegas, Jérôme Cloué, Vice President of Electrification for Epiroc, talked up numerous electrification launches/debuts at the show that would go a long way to helping its customers achieve their sustainability targets.

During a visit to Boliden’s Rävliden mine, part of the Kristineberg complex, in in northern Sweden in late August to highlight the Epiroc Minetruck MT42 SG Battery vehicle running on an 800-m trolley test track underground, Cloué said the company was expecting to make many announcements at the show, including some that fit into the “zero carbon” category.

Epiroc, as part of its sustainability goals, has outlined 2025 and 2030 dates for having fossil-free options in place for its underground and surface mining product lines, respectively. Cloué was confident the company would meet these targets, however it is unlikely these will be exclusively battery-electric options – especially at the top end of the surface drilling product line where the company is leveraging cable-electric power for each drill in the Pit Viper series, for instance.

In the meantime, Epiroc is also working with clients on certifying the use of biodiesel in its existing diesel-powered fleet for “immediate” decarbonisation benefits. Cloué said the surface drilling fleet is already compatible with biofuel (HVO100), with the underground load and haul, and drilling fleets set to follow shortly.

The company is also continuing to advance its work on repurposing batteries used in its mining equipment for secondary life applications. Outside of mining, the company has signed a partnership with Renewmic, whereby a battery previously used to power one of Epiroc’s battery-electric vehicles is helping to support and stabilise the Swedish power grid through frequency containment reserve services. Cloué expects to see more of these examples crop up in mining in the future, strengthening the business case for battery-electric machines through an extension of the battery’s working life.

He is also expecting further collaborations such as the one Epiroc highlighted with Boliden and ABB at the Kristineberg operation last week.

“Mining houses and suppliers are realising that the way to accelerate the [electrification] transformation is through collaboration,” he told IM. “We are looking to work with other partners like ABB on future projects.”

ABB set for eMine truck fast charging leap

ABB is working on a new fast charging solution under its eMine™ ecosystem that will represent a 10-fold increase in capacity compared with its previous 600 kW solution, Nic Beutler, Global eMine Solutions Manager, told IM this week.

Speaking on the sidelines of a trip to Boliden’s Rävliden mine in northern Sweden, Beutler said ABB is extending the capability of eMine FastCharge, explaining the previous solution it showcased in 2021 with MEDATech Engineering and Staubli would be far surpassed by this.

This 600 kW eMine FastCharge charger requires no machine operators to charge up the vehicle. Drivers station their vehicles next to the charger, the FastCharge system senses its presence and then moves the connection pin into position, inserting it into the receptacle and charging the vehicle. The solution was demonstrated on a Western Star 4900XD-e machine that MEDATech’s ALTDRIVE division had retrofitted with a battery (see below).

“What we’re working on is a more than 10-fold increase in charging power from the 600 kW fast charge solution we have previously showcased whilst keeping interoperability and flexibility in mind,” Beutler said.

“The increase in power is representative of how fast the industry has moved in these three years. Where we were once looking at charging battery vehicles in the 100-t-class and below, we’re now looking at supplying charge to vehicles with payloads of 240-280 t with a 6C charge rate.”

The news also comes on the back of Staubli announcing that it would present a charging connection device built for 7.5 MW capacity chargers at MINExpo INTERNATIONAL 2024, in Las Vegas, next month.

While Beutler couldn’t provide further specifics on the exact charging capacity and charge time, he did acknowledge the new fast charger would retain the containerised and modular nature that ABB established for the original 600 kW pilot system.

“There will be more containerised components than what we previously highlighted,” he said.

“It will require a larger footprint and some further application engineering depending on the site conditions, but the modularity element remains to also allow the integration of various manual and automated connection interfaces.”

Epiroc records ‘best quarter ever for electrification’

In a quarter of record revenues and adjusted operating margin, Epiroc’s battery-electric equipment orders and market demand for electrified mining solutions again came to the fore.

The company posted revenues of SEK11.9 billion ($1.2 billion) in the June quarter, 22% up on the same three-month period of a year ago. Its adjusted operating margin came in at 23.6%, compared with 22.6% a year earlier.

Epiroc’s aftermarket division continued to dominate the balance sheet, accounting for 73% of revenues, which itself was up on the 69% registered in the June quarter of 2021.

Included within this revenue is the company’s growing mid-life battery retrofit solution, which it launched last year to provide a second electrified life for its diesel-powered machines. Able to convert existing machines to battery-electric versions, CEO Helena Hedblom said the offering continued to find favour with existing mining customers.

“With brownfield operations, there are great opportunities to bring battery-electric solutions into the fleet with our retrofit option when, for example, existing diesel-powered machines go in for their mid-life upgrades,” she said.

To this point, the company has devised readily available battery-electric retrofit options for its diesel-powered Scooptram ST1030, Scooptram ST14 and Minetruck MT436 machines, but Hedblom said the company was working on offering this option across its entire diesel-powered fleet, with the machine retrofit rollout plan determined by the size of the installed base in the marketplace.

The company also won several major equipment contracts in the June quarter that included battery-electric solutions.

Its electric machines are set to feature on major projects such as Odyssey and Onaping Depth in Canada. Closer to home in Sweden, the Epiroc battery-electric fleet will grow at LKAB’s underground iron ore operations and Boliden is set to use several of zero-emission truck and loaders at numerous mine sites.

Epiroc labelled Q2 as its “best quarter ever for electrification”, and Hedblom was equally effusive about the company’s offering, saying it was built for both greenfield and brownfield mines.

“We have a strong position in the electrification market; both for equipment sales, retrofit and electrical infrastructure,” she said.

The company’s infrastructure proposition was strengthened during the quarter with the acquisition of JTMEC, an Australia-based company specialising in providing mines with electrical infrastructure.

This comes on top of the company’s recent purchase of Meglab, a Canada-based company with expertise in providing electrification infrastructure solutions to mines, meaning it has electrification infrastructure expertise in two major mining hubs.

One of the battery-electric orders received during the most recent three-month period was from Boliden for the Rävliden, Kristineberg and Renström mine sites in northern Sweden. Included within this order was an Scooptram ST18 Battery that, the company previously confirmed, will include the incorporation of Scooptram Automation, representing one of the first times these battery-backed machines will receive an automation upgrade.

While a solution for automating the battery charging or swapping process remains some way off, Hedblom sees the convergence of the two – electrification and automation – getting closer in the future.

“Electrification and automation go hand in hand, with companies that are high on electrification also typically being high on automation,” she said.

Boliden on mining’s differentiation pathway

When Mikael Staffas joins a panel on stage at the EIT Raw Materials Summit in Berlin, Germany, to discuss building a world-leading raw materials industry for Europe next month, he will be able to reference more than a few examples of sector excellence from his own company.

The Sweden-based mining and metals company has been leading from the front for decades, leveraging new and innovative technology, employing a more diverse workforce and engaging local stakeholders and regulators in a manner viewed as progressive from peers across the globe.

Gaining recognition from your mining company peers is one thing but gaining it from the public and EU-based decision makers is something altogether different.

According to Staffas, CEO of the company, the latest summit, which takes place on May 23-25, is part of a series of actions and events slowly getting these two groups to understand the importance of raw materials and the companies that produce them.

“We are moving this industry away from a perception that we are part of the problem, to an environment where we are seen to be part of the solution,” he told IM.

Staffas says the raw materials industry has been viewed as fundamentally important to Europe for several years in terms of tackling the climate change challenge – which will be reinforced at the summit – but the “regionalisation of economies” that has been brought about by COVID and the more recent geopolitical situation means this importance has, once again, been reinforced.

Within this context, Staffas is due to discuss at the event the fundamental need for copper and nickel in the energy transition. He will also shine a light on the importance of lead and zinc in this evolving landscape.

Boliden, through its mines and smelters in Finland, Sweden, Norway and Ireland, is a producer of all four of these metals. It can also add gold, silver, sulphuric acid, cobalt and palladium to the list.

As the general population is beginning to understand the importance of these raw materials and metals to their future, Boliden is trying to differentiate its own offering from the rest of its peers.

Not satisfied with simply matching the industry’s carbon emission and net zero goals to 2030 and beyond, Boliden has laid the gauntlet down to the rest of its competitors by registering two new products: Low-Carbon Copper and Low-Carbon Zinc.

The formula for these two low-carbon products is based on the production of finished metal, from cradle to gate, that has emissions of less than 1.5 t of CO2 per tonne of copper, compared with the global average of around 4 t of CO2 per tonne. For zinc, the threshold is even lower – less than 1 t of CO2 emissions per tonne of zinc, compared with the industry average of 2.5 t.

To this point, the introduction of both products has resulted in a slim premium over other products on the market, but Staffas still deems the launches as successful.

“The point was to differentiate our products, with many people expected to receive this differentiation,” he said.

The customers represented just one set of recipients, but Staffas said these new products also play into the ‘licence to operate’ equation, as well as discussions with authorities and non-governmental organisations.

The intention was to also lay down a benchmark the rest of the industry could start to use or discuss, he added.

Boliden’s carbon dioxide calculations include emissions along the entire value chain up to the customer according to the Scope 1, 2 and 3 Greenhouse Gas Protocol Product Life Cycle, following the ISO 14064-3 standard.

“While this might not be the only way to measure CO2, we think it is the best one,” Staffas said. “We are trying to force the industry to adopt a common way of measuring the CO2 footprint.”

This has led some of Boliden’s customers to enquire about how much embedded CO2 is in competitor zinc and copper products, ensuring the discussion spreads throughout the industry.

The obvious intention of devising such products is price, but Staffas said they also provide protection.

“When things get bad from an economical perspective, these products could really make a difference,” he said. “The customers might not pay extra for them, but if they scale down their purchases, our contracts should be the last to be cancelled.”

Staffas says Boliden is also aiming to add nickel and lead to its suite of low-carbon products in the future.

“Nickel is a special case for us as we don’t produce finished nickel; we produce a nickel matte,” he said. “We may team up with a refinery to make a joint product or do something else to ensure we can quantify the emissions according to our chosen protocols.

“Whichever way this development goes, we have to ensure we cover cradle-to-gate with these calculations otherwise it is not a true representation of the embedded carbon in that product.”

Electrification

While quantifying the carbon emissions of products is still relatively new in mining and smelting, Boliden has been using a carbon price in its internal technical studies and projections for close to a decade now.

It has been leveraging electrified sources of power for even longer. For instance, its Rönnskär copper smelter in Sweden has been using an electric oven since the 1990s.

More recently, the company has added trolley assist at Aitik and Kevitsa to this electrified base and employed ventilation on demand and heat exchangers at underground mines (the former) and smelters (the latter) to optimise its energy use.

It also has plans for underground trolley-battery haulage operation at its Rävliden (part of Kristineberg) project in Sweden through a project with Epiroc and ABB, while it is conducting a battery-electric vehicle loading trial at the Garpenberg mine, also in Sweden, with Sandvik. On the transport side, the company has recently teamed up with Scania to electrify part of its heavy-duty road transport in northern Sweden.

“It is one thing to review where we started; it is another to look at where we are going,” Staffas said on this topic. “We are planning to get better and better and go on to reduce our CO2 footprint further.”

On its way to achieving a goal of reducing its carbon dioxide intensity by 40% by 2030, the company is also looking at, among other levers, its use of explosives and cement: two key scope 3 inputs.

Staffas is confident Boliden can hit these ambitious goals by leveraging the innovation ecosystem within the Nordic region.

“For the CO2 journey we are now on, the Nordic mining cluster has and will continue to be very important,” he said. “We have big suppliers like Epiroc, Sandvik, Metso Outotec, ABB, Volvo and Scania on our doorstep. They have always worked closely with us, and we work closely with them on joint development projects.

“I think that is the main reason we are so far ahead of our competitors when it comes to our use of technology and innovation, and why we are confident in achieving our ambitious climate goals.”