Improved drill-and-blast designs free $3.6 million of ore for surface copper mine - ME Feature Article
- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 1052 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 2025
Abstract
Capstone Copper’s Pinto Valley Mine faced
challenges in recovering rock and ore on
final walls because of geotechnical constraints
that require restrictions on methods for loading
blastholes adjacent to the pit boundaries to
preserve wall stability. The operation had
been using the same drill-and-blast designs for
years. With changing geology, such as harder
rock, as mining progressed, material was being
left unmined in final walls because of poor
breakage. The amount of
unrecovered, unprocessed
ore was estimated at 345 kt/a
(380,000 stpy) generated
from an average of 60
final wall blasts performed
annually. The engineering
team from Capstone and
Dyno Nobel engaged to
minimize the amount of
material left on the final pit
walls.
This article presents
how data were collected and
design standards reviewed,
and the opportunities that
were found to improve
ore recovery from pit final
walls without increasing
drilling and blasting costs.
The results collected from
implementing the new
design on two benches showed the potential
for extra revenue of approximately $3.6 million
generated annually from reducing final wall
unrecoverable underbreak by nearly 71 percent
on the mine’s highwalls.
Citation
APA: (2025) Improved drill-and-blast designs free $3.6 million of ore for surface copper mine - ME Feature Article
MLA: Improved drill-and-blast designs free $3.6 million of ore for surface copper mine - ME Feature Article. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2025.