Nammuldi mine

The Nammuldi mine is an iron ore mine located in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, 60 kilometres north-west of Tom Price.[1]

Nammuldi mine
Location
Nammuldi mine
Location in Australia
LocationPilbara
StateWestern Australia
CountryAustralia
Coordinates22°25′07″S 117°21′37″E
Production
ProductsIron ore
Production6.6 million tonnes/annum
History
Opened2006
Owner
CompanyRio Tinto Iron Ore
WebsiteRio Tinto Iron Ore website

The mine is fully owned and operated by Rio Tinto Iron Ore and is one of twelve iron ore mines the company operates in the Pilbara.[2][3] In the calendar year 2009, the combined Pilbara operations produced 202 million tonnes of iron ore, a 15 percent increase from 2008.[4] The Pilbara operations accounted for almost 13 percent of the world's 2009 iron ore production of 1.59 billion tonnes.[5][6]

The Hamersley Range, where the mine is located, contains 80 percent of all identified iron ore reserves in Australia and is one of the world's major iron ore provinces.[7]

Overview

Iron ore mines in the Pilbara region.

Rio Tinto's iron ore operations in the Pilbara began in 1966.[2] The mine itself began operations in 2006, during a time when Rio Tinto increased the production output of its mines in the Pilbara due to increased demands.[8] The mine has an annual production capacity of 6.6 million tonnes of iron ore, sourced from open-pit operations. The ore is processed on site before being loaded onto rail.[9]

Ore from the mine is then transported to the coast through the Hamersley & Robe River railway, where it is loaded onto ships.[10]

The mine's workforce is on a fly-in fly-out roster.[9]

The mine is located near the Brockman mine, also operated by Rio Tinto.[2] Rio Tinto briefly had to close the mine in February 2009, alongside Brockman, because of heavy rain and floods in the region.[11]

From October 2015 all of the ore trucks on the site, and those at Yandicoogina mine are remotely controlled from Perth, 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) away. These are the world's first two mines that have moved all their iron ore "using fully remote-controlled trucks".[12]

The mine is owned by Hamersley Iron Pty Ltd, a fully owned subsidiary of Rio Tinto, which owns six mines in the Pilbara, including Nammuldi, and partly owns two more mines in the region.[13]

gollark: Bad gibson. Utter apiform.
gollark: NONE are safe.
gollark: ++tel dial BetsPacksContour
gollark: Okay, tokens regenerated, the webhook which was causing problems has been regenerated too, and bees expunged.
gollark: Oh apioform.

References

  1. MINEDEX website: Nammuldi search result Archived 2008-09-11 at the Wayback Machine accessed: 6 November 2010
  2. Pilbara Archived 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine Rio Tinto Iron Ore website, accessed: 6 November 2010
  3. Mining Archived 2010-06-12 at the Wayback Machine Rio Tinto Iron Ore website, accessed: 6 November 2010
  4. Preparing for the future Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine Rio Tinto presentation, published: 23 March 2010, accessed: 7 November 2010
  5. Global iron-ore production falls 6,2% in 2009 – Unctad report miningweekly.com, published: 30 July 2010, accessed: 7 November 2010
  6. Production of iron ore fell in 2009, but shipments continued to increase, report says UNCTAD website, published: 30 July 2010, accessed: 7 November 2010
  7. Iron fact sheet – Australian Resources and Deposits Archived 2011-02-18 at the Wayback Machine Geoscience Australia website, accessed: 7 November 2010
  8. Iron ore mining outlook Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine miningaustralia.com.au, published: 12 November 2007, accessed: 7 November 2010
  9. Nammuldi mine Archived 2010-06-14 at the Wayback Machine Rio Tinto Iron Ore website, accessed: 6 November 2010
  10. Rail Archived 2013-07-01 at the Wayback Machine Rio Tinto Iron Ore website, accessed: 6 November 2010
  11. Rio Tinto resuming Australian iron-ore mining after floods Archived 2011-09-30 at the Wayback Machine mining-journal.com, published: 25 February 2009, accessed: 7 November 2010
  12. Diss, Kathryn (18 October 2015). "Driverless trucks move all iron ore at Rio Tinto's Pilbara mines, in world first". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 18 October 2015. The first two mines in the world to start moving all of their iron ore using fully remote-controlled trucks have just gone online in Western Australia's Pilbara.
  13. Western Australian Mineral and Petroleum Statistic Digest 2009 Department of Mines and Petroleum website, accessed: 8 November 2010
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.