To determine power needs underground, a team would typically prepare a load list and load estimate, with accuracy depending on the level of study. This identifies both connected and demand loads, providing the basis for estimating overall power requirements. Power models and detailed studies then refine these estimates, ensuring the system is designed to meet operational needs.
Historically, a 10 MW feed was typically sufficient for underground operations. As more equipment transitions to electric power, demand has risen from 10 to 15 MW for small to medium mines and 15 to 20 MW for larger mines. When strategically viable, adding BEVs and/or other electric vehicles underground can push demand even higher by another 3 to 7 MW, depending on the charging philosophy (battery swapping vs on board quick charging).
BEVs introduce highly variable loads. Each unit can draw 120 to 500 kW depending on the size of charger and the time frame available for charging. The higher power peaks are associated with fast charging onboard the vehicle during mealtimes and breaks, where 12 to 14 LHDs, each drawing 500 kW, will yield an additional demand as high as 7 MW. Battery swap systems generally introduce less fluctuations and have a more constant demand. The fluctuations affect demand load, peak load, power quality, surface transformer size, switchgear size and feeder cable capacity.
Previously, a mine with a 10 W demand load may have had two 250 MCM or two 500 MCM cables installed to allow for 30 to 50% growth capacity. However, transient BEV loads, especially for onboard or fast-charging equipment that draw more power for a shorter period, can overwhelm these designs. A fully electric mine sometimes needs dedicated feeders, extra switchgear or more cables to support BEVs. To meet today's standard mine demand of ~10 to 15 W plus BEVs, three or even four 500 MCM 3-conductor cables, and possibly even more, are becoming more common. This trend increases capital costs, surface footprint and many other considerations.