IT in Manufacturing


Unleashing the future of mining

January 2024 IT in Manufacturing

With the demand for critical minerals for the clean energy transition surging, the World Bank predicts a 500% increase in their production by 2050. For the mining industry, this means unprecedented growth. But it also faces a plethora of internal and external challenges. Internally, a scarcity of skilled labour has led mining companies to adopt automation and digitalisation to improve operations. Externally, fluctuations in global resource prices affect the industry, requiring it to adapt quickly to meet diverse mineral extraction demands. In response to these constant changes, mining operations are proactively embracing digital transformation, leveraging technologies such as automation, unmanned systems, and AI for image recognition to enhance operational efficiency and safety.

Advanced technologies for enhanced operations

A Canadian iron mine, for example, has introduced automated mining vehicles and smart shovels equipped with advanced X-ray fluorescence (XRF) sensors and wireless connectivity, significantly speeding up on-site ore identification and sorting processes. The image recognition system helps guide the vehicles and dispatch them based on ore sorting results, boosting operational efficiency. Moreover, the mining site uses IIoT technology to connect a variety of equipment and vehicles, facilitating seamless data sharing and collaboration. This real-time access to critical data empowers mining vehicle fleets, allowing them to run smoothly in the mining field. Meanwhile, the use of robotic dogs in terrain reconnaissance is helping a South African gold mine to plan appropriate mining paths, mitigating risks and ensuring safety.

Connectivity across mine sites

Transmitting and analysing large volumes of data between equipment and systems is crucial; but in minefields, ensuring seamless connectivity between humans and machines, as well as between machines, is challenging.

Communication issues that modern mining operations must prioritise include the following:

• Ensuring stable connectivity: Reliable mining operations require a stable communication network. Obstacles are introduced by challenging minefield conditions such as dust, extreme temperatures, vibration and signal interference. To tackle these issues, resilient connectivity with rapid failover redundancy, seamless roaming, and reliable products are needed to minimise hidden maintenance costs.

• Seamlessly integrating information: Mining operations require the integration of multiple subsystems for collaboration. The diverse equipment and sensors used in mining often run on different protocols like Modbus, MQTT and ProfiNet. Hence, the seamless integration of communication systems is essential for efficient data acquisition, data sharing and interoperability between systems.

• Visualising communication networks: On large mining sites with limited personnel, ensuring uninterrupted communication for thousands of connected devices is challenging. To overcome this, modern mining operations use visualisation techniques to monitor and manage wired and wireless communication devices remotely in real time. This minimises malfunctions, improves equipment maintenance, and enhances operational efficiency.

• Establishing flexible architecture: Scalable infrastructure is the key to meeting future growth demands. As the number of mining and imaging devices increases, communication infrastructure must be expandable to accommodate these growing needs. The mining site should consider reserving sufficient bandwidth, assessing network expansion feasibility, implementing efficient tiered management, and integrating edge and cloud technologies for future scalability.

• Network and cybersecurity: As mining companies interconnect devices and transmit data to remote central control centres, they inevitably face cybersecurity threats. To address security concerns from the control room to the OT field site, it is important to protect the network, strengthen cybersecurity capabilities, and use secure devices based on the IEC 62443 standard.

In conclusion, the mining industry’s digital transformation journey is not without its hurdles. By harnessing the power of technology and addressing communication challenges head on, modern mining operations can improve their efficiency and safety. Through this transformative process, the potential of tomorrow’s resources can be fully unleashed, ushering in a new era of mining excellence.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Install and commissioning time cut by 50% thanks to digital twin insights
Rockwell Automation IT in Manufacturing
ECM Technologies, a world leader in the design and manufacture of innovative and modular low-pressure carburising industrial furnaces, has developed a solution that removes many of the installation and commissioning challenges relating to the development, testing and deployment of large-scale heat treatment plants.

Read more...
Real-time monitoring and predictive maintenance in African data centres
ACTOM Electrical Machines IT in Manufacturing
Running a data centre in Africa brings many challenges. Traditional maintenance strategies struggle to keep up with these realities. Predictive maintenance offers a different approach.

Read more...
Siemens ecosystem strengthens data and AI integration
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has announced significant expansions to its Industrial Edge ecosystem, accelerating data and AI integration and releasing enhanced cybersecurity functionalities. These enable a seamless integration of IT and OT environments, optimise processes and reduce operational disruptions.

Read more...
Siemens manages shipbuilding process for HD Hyundai
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has been selected by HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering as a preferred partner to establish an integrated platform to manage the entire shipbuilding process as a single data flow to help ensure consistency across all its global shipyard facilities.

Read more...
Transforming the process industry through digitalisation
Endress+Hauser South Africa IT in Manufacturing
By connecting field devices, systems and people, digitalisation creates new opportunities to optimise operations, enhance maintenance strategies and support continuous improvement. As a leading instrumentation provider and major source of process data, Endress+Hauser plays a key role in enabling this transformation.

Read more...
The OT operator’s guide to security and uptime on the plant
RJ Connect IT in Manufacturing
The article addresses three common questions about industrial network deployment and maintenance, exploring ways to achieve better control and visibility with more efficiency.

Read more...
The assets you can’t see are the ones that can shut you down
IT in Manufacturing
ABEGuardOT is an asset management solution that delivers continuous, non-intrusive visibility across multi-vendor environments, including Siemens, Rockwell, ABB, Honeywell, Schneider Electric, Emerson, GE and Yokogawa, with support for OPC UA, EtherNet/IP, Modbus and Profibus.

Read more...
Edge I/O NTS and the need for industrial speed
Schneider Electric South Africa IT in Manufacturing
One of the most compelling solutions to emerge from industrial automation is Edge I/O NTS, which represents a natural evolution of computing from centralised servers to localised, device-level input/output processing, offering improved speed, efficiency and resilience.

Read more...
The next wave of AI-driven process automation
Schneider Electric South Africa IT in Manufacturing
As process industries hurtle toward an AI-driven future, four powerful trends are set to redefine automation strategies in 2026: hyper automation, AI-first automation, low code/no code platforms, and advanced process intelligence.

Read more...
Huge increase in denial-of-service cyber threats
IT in Manufacturing
NETSCOUT has released its Distributed Denial-of-Service Threat Intelligence report, revealing sophisticated attacker collaboration, resilient botnets and compromised IoT infrastructure that drove more than eight million DDoS attacks worldwide.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved