Pit Optimisation
Pit Optimisation
Pit Optimisation
By P L McCarthy 1
Introduction
For any deposit which can be fully or partially mined using
open pit methods, there is one pit design which will maximise
the NPV of the project at the designed mining rate. Several
methods are available to optimise the design of the open pit to
approach this ideal. It should be noted that all optimisation
techniques produce a theoretical pit limit design which then
must be subject to detailed design. The incorporation of catch
benches, working face angles and/or roads leads to a practical
mining design which may not provide the idealised NPV
produced by the optimisation method. However, with careful
planning, the variation from optimum will not be substantial.
Manual Methods
To perform a manual design it is important to understand the
difference between the overall stripping ratio for the pit and the
incremental stripping ratio for the last bench or block of ore. In
optimising the pit, the overall stripping ratio is irrelevant and is
simply a property of the final pit design. The incremental
stripping ratio is the ratio of the volume or tonnage of waste
which must be moved to access the next increment of ore to the
mass of ore that will be accessed.
Expected costs and revenues are then used to calculate a
minimum acceptable stripping ratio for the last increment. The
pit design is then produced by drawing increasingly large pit
shells on cross section such that the last increment has a strip
ratio equal to the design minimum. This is a very labour
intensive approach and can only ever approximate the optimal
pit. The design must be done on a large number of cross
sections and is still inaccurate because it treats the problems in
only two dimensions. In cases of highly variable grade the
problem becomes extremely complex.
1.
Pit Optimisation
Pit Optimisation
Figure 3 - Defining pit limits of a hypothetical ore body with a series of removal increments
Figure 4
Pit Optimisation
Ore
4,000
Waste
100
6,400
Total
Value
Pit
400
1,600
If ore is worth $2.00 per tonne after all ore mining and
processing costs have been paid, and if waste costs $1.00 per
tonne to remove, then we have the total values shown in Table
1 in today's dollars. If we plot pit value against pit tonnage we
get the graph shown in Figure 5. Whether pit 5 is in fact the
optimum pit depends on the mining sequence and on the mining
and processing capacities.
Figure 5
2.
3.
Pit Optimisation
Detailed Design
Pit optimisation produces a jagged outline from the block
model. This outline must be smooth and all roads and safety
beams must be put in. To smooth the outline by hand, you
merely draw a smooth curve approximately through the mid
points of the block edges. If you are using computer aided
design, you contour the surface defined by the centre of the
base of the lowest block in each column.
By doing this, tonnage is added and subtracted alternately along
the outline in almost identical quantities. If a particular part of
the outline is entirely in ore, or entirely in waste, then these
balanced additions and subtractions have no effect whatever on
the value of the pit. Losses in one part of the pit are likely to be
gained in another.
Provided the optimal blockout line has been generate with
average required slopes, then similar balanced additions and
subtractions occur when all roads and safety berms are
incorporated into the pitwalls.
It should be noted that optimal pit outlines are very robust in
the face of dimensional change. Refer to the curve linking pit
values and tonnage in Figure 6. If detailed design starts from
point A, which is not optimal, then small changes to the design
can make significant changes to the value of the pit.
Historically this was the case and pit designers spent days or
weeks assessing the effects of detailed changes to designs.
With an optimal outline, the curve is approximately horizontal
at point B and small changes have almost no effect on the value
of the pit.
Calculation of Revenue
Figure 6
Pit Optimisation
For a 100 t block with a grade of 2.5 g/t Au the revenue is given
by:
Grade x Metal Price x Recovery
2.5 x 370/31.1035 (grams per ounce) x 0.95 x 100 = $2,825
In a more complex case where there may be several products
with different treatment routes the revenue calculation becomes
more complex. In these cases it is often easier to work in
equivalent grades, that is calculate the grade of one element
which would yield the same revenue.
Summary