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Mining exploration â€“ what does the future hold?

Sinead Kaufman, Chief Executive Minerals


Last updated: 22 September 2021

 

Finding quality greenfield resources is getting much harder.

There has been considerable discussion around the increasing degree of difficulty of new discoveries with attributable factors such as industry consolidation, access challenges, decreasing grades, reduced grassroots spending, depleting talent pool of experienced geologists, exploring at depth and under cover as well as the changing geopolitical environment, which links to the risk appetite of companies. Everything “easy” to find has probably already been found, is the often-repeated lament.

All these factors are relevant but there are also some broader factors which I believe are useful in informing the quest for discovering the next 100 years of metals and minerals. They are out there to be discovered: we just need to be brave in challenging pre-conceived beliefs.

Sinead Kaufman, Chief Executive Minerals
Future geoscientists will have to navigate through a complex, data saturated environment, with targets and patterns often invisible to the human eye, where machine learning and data analytics play an increasingly important role in target generation and resource evaluation."

Combining new ways of thinking with new technology

Technology holds the key to unlocking mature terrains, particularly through data analytics where we can process vast amounts of data and discover new trends. But data analytics and fancy technology alone is not the answer. It needs to be accompanied by new thinking and the courage and open mindedness to test and adapt.

In around 2011-12, it became clear that we were going to have to crack the code in terms of how we effectively explore under cover. And so there was a concerted effort in our exploration team to think about a suite of technologies that would help us do that and how we rethink the whole exploration conundrum.

We then worked through the technologies – and there are a few them used across various industries, not just mining – and then we worked through our philosophies. We began to ask the right questions: “Where in the world are regions where we know there is already potential, where there is already a world-class deposit, but the rest of the belt potentially sits beneath cover?”

Take Winu, our copper-gold project in Western Australia. What makes it special is that it is a blind deposit, completely under cover, sitting in an area that was previously identified as gold country. There is no outcropping. It was revealed by new technologies and bold new thinking. This thinking was seeded by informed intuition and then affirmed by the capacity of supercomputers to drag information from the deepest of data pools.

Future geoscientists will have to navigate through a complex, data saturated environment, with targets and patterns often invisible to the human eye, where machine learning and data analytics play an increasingly important role in target generation and resource evaluation.

Every drill hole is telling us something new and slowly the story of the Winu deposit is being revealed. And technology will continue to play a big part in the Winu story. For example, we are hyper spectrally scanning all core and chips in the field to help us understand the lithology to assist in really nailing the mineralogy and metallurgy as soon as we can. We have high expectations that we will be using machine learning and sophisticated mathematical models to help us optimise the recoveries from any final flowsheets.

Employee looks out at West Angelas, Pilbara

Exploration is a team sport

Diverse and well networked teams are key to unlocking the minerals of the future. Related to this is the need for an incubator mindset.

A case in point here is the discovery of the Jadar lithium-borate resource in Western Serbia where we have seen, and continue to see, the networked model and the incubator mindset deliver results.

But let’s start with some background. ÌÇÐÄvlogÈë¿Úfirst visited Serbia in 1998 looking for borates. Over the next few years exploration progressed and the first drill hole into the Jadar deposit was completed in 2004. This find included the discovery of a new mineral called jadarite. Serbia’s Jadar basin is today, the only place in the world where this deposit has been found. This is a geologically rare event as it is not normal to find hundreds of millions of tonnes of a mineral never previously recorded.

The importance of a diverse and networked team in the discovery and evaluation at Jadar cannot be overestimated. This includes academics and a wide group of local and global experts across all aspects of the environmental, social and governance (ESG) impacts of the Jadar project. And this is a key point for the future – while finding a new mineral is more difficult than ever, so too is obtaining a social license to operate. The mineral resource sector is facing more pressure than ever to deliver better ESG performance and with exploration being in the frontline, ESG will play a significant role in future exploration and discoveries. Collaborating on the ESG requirements sooner rather than later will be a key feature of maintaining tenure as well as ensuring genuine and transparent community engagement.

By way of example on the environmental front, at Jadar our team of scientists and other experts worked together to develop a stable and reliable process to transform processing waste from slurry into filter cakes. Through this method of dry stacking we can reduce the volume of waste that needs to be stored, negating the need for a tailings dam. There are many other examples and to date we have finalised 12 environmental studies and more than 23,000 biological, physical and chemical analyses of air and water have been completed. This consultation is ongoing and will continue to inform our final submissions for approval.

The incubator concept at Jadar is also paying dividends. Jadarite is a new mineral with no reference points and no known process anywhere in the world that could be used as a template for extraction, so a bench scale pilot plant was a critical part in understanding if and how the lithium could be extracted. This has resulted in a new technology to produce saleable lithium and boron products from the jadarite ore, with a small pilot plant developed at our research centre in Australia to test the new technology.

Over a period of six years a global team of experts has conducted some 2,000 tests to confirm the technical viability of the processing method and this has led to numerous improvements in the production process and in the health, safety and environmental protection processes.

A pioneering spirit

Ours is an extraordinary industry by virtue of the fact that Mother Nature hides her minerals in some of the most remote, ecologically pristine environments in the world.

And with much of the low-lying fruit already discovered, we need to be prepared to go, with a sense of adventure, to places that Mother Nature needs to take us, to find the next generation of minerals and develop ways to extract them in the full knowledge of what we will be leaving behind.

This is what will be required of our next generation of geologists, metallurgists and other disciplines we have not even heard of, if we are to go to the ends of the earth to discover the next generation of minerals, against a backdrop of climate change and the ever-increasing demands on the fragile planet we all share. We need to imbue them with a pioneering spirit, to enable them to challenge norms and the status quo, to embrace new technology and advanced data analytics and to deeply understand the requirement to transition to a low-carbon future.

 

Banner: Markus Spiske

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