Mine planning spans multiple horizons, from early strategic options to life‑of‑mine planning, medium‑term budgeting and daily operations. Each serves a different purpose, but resilience depends on how well they connect.
Risk emerges when plans are optimized in isolation. Decisions taken early, around sequencing, scale, infrastructure or operating assumptions, quietly shape what will remain possible years later. Once committed, some choices become difficult to revisit, even when conditions evolve.
“All planning horizons need to connect. If risks and opportunities don’t cascade properly from one level to the next, you lose sight of what really matters.”
— Nicolas Szwedska, Principal Engineer, BBA
This is why resilient mine planning is less about maximizing theoretical value on paper and more about balancing short‑term performance with long‑term optionality. Plans that rely on extended periods of negative cash flow, unrealistic ramp‑ups or abrupt step‑changes may appear optimal in a model, yet prove difficult, or impossible, to execute in reality.
Flexibility is often built deliberately into the design. Establishing cash flow early, staging development and allowing room to learn from actual operating conditions can significantly reduce risk before committing to full‑scale expansion.
“It is often better to start smaller, establish cash flow, and expand once you have more certainty about the ore, the processing and the operation itself.”
— Rod Williams, Principal Engineer, BBA
Certain principles consistently underpin mining plans that adapt well over time, without turning planning into a rigid checklist:
- Early identification of critical constraints
Geological, processing, environmental, community and logistical realities must be understood upfront, not discovered as the project unfolds. - Anticipation of regulatory and technological trajectories
Environmental expectations, electrification and automation are moving in one direction; planning should reflect where standards are heading, not where they are today. - Integration of people and communities into planning decisions
Workforce availability, housing, logistics and social context directly affect how fast, and how realistically, an operation can scale or adapt. - Infrastructure and sequencing choices that preserve flexibility
Early decisions around facility placement, mine access and sequencing can quietly expand, or severely constrain, future options, often creating organizational inertia that is difficult to reverse. - A deliberate balance between short‑term value and long‑term adaptability
Plans that appear optimal on paper may struggle over time if they sacrifice optionality for immediate gains.