Mining Mirror February 2018 | Page 50

Insight The mine of the future Advanced technologies are changing the mining industry as we know it, writes Gys Kappers. N ew products and services require different materials, which affects demand for traditional minerals and commodities. This will influence demand for primary resources in the long term. For the foreseeable future, this state is the ‘new normal’. The mining industry will have to embrace this disruption, both as a constraint and as an enabler, to cope with this trend. So, what will the mine of the future look like? Change, in every respect, is needed for survival. At the heart of this change, is people. If mining companies are to succeed, they will require a deeper understanding of the shifting community to improve the social divide. Furthermore, increased demand for transparency and accountability in business transactions globally, is forcing the sector to relook how people and the industry are managed.  Innovative thinking needs to influence the way mining companies engage with workers and surrounding communities. New technologies and ways of connecting have the potential to influence a different outcome for the broader community; one that makes the mining house and community share the responsibility for a changing landscape with divergent future scenarios. Management in the digital age should be concerned with the deployment and coordination of [48] MINING MIRROR FEBRUARY 2018 people and resources at various levels of the organisation, to steer a new course to realising strategies. The difference here is that the organisation and its key resources will be digitally enabled with a view to become far more efficient. Structures and jobs will be fluid and permeable, merging into value ecosystems rather than value chains. People will work in virtual teams and disband as needs change. The management challenge will lie in data analysis, and deploying and coordinating people and digital resources in ways that will enable people to do what they do best and leave digital technology to do what it does best.  Innovation should drive more than cost reduction — it can help mitigate and manage risk, strengthen business models, and foster more effective relations. Mining companies need to prepare to shift traditional entrenched models, plan for future scenarios where collaboration is at the centre of a lean operation, and use digitalisation to enable and drive the industry forward. b About the author Gys Kappers is the CEO of Wyzetalk, a South Africa-based digital engagement company.