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    Australia’s AI‑minerals shift: planning, power and project control for engineers

    January 28, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Australia’s AI‑minerals shift: planning, power and project control for engineers

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    Australia’s mining sector is being reshaped by the convergence of AI‑driven automation, critical minerals demand and national security concerns, with Canberra pushing for onshore processing of lithium, rare earths and other strategic inputs. Operators are deploying machine‑learning tools for orebody modelling, real‑time fleet optimisation and predictive maintenance on autonomous haul trucks and drills, while tightening export controls and foreign investment rules seek to protect supply chains. For engineers, this points to more data‑centric mine planning, higher electrical loads for processing, and closer scrutiny of project ownership and offtake agreements.

    Technical Brief

    • Machine-learning drill‑hole targeting is being trialled on brownfields gold and copper assets to extend mine life.
    • Autonomous haulage systems are now integrating AI‑based tyre‑load and road‑condition assessment to reduce unplanned stoppages.
    • AI‑assisted geometallurgical models are being linked directly to block models to refine ore–waste cut‑off decisions.
    • Some lithium projects are using computer‑vision ore sorting to upgrade run‑of‑mine feed before dense‑media separation.
    • Real‑time AI dispatch tools are being deployed on mixed fleets of manned and autonomous trucks at large open pits.
    • For new mining developments, design briefs increasingly specify data infrastructure (edge servers, fibre, storage) as core process plant.

    Our Take

    Critical minerals stories in our database increasingly feature Australia alongside Canada and the US, signalling that Australian projects are now seen as one of the main pillars for non‑Chinese supply chains rather than a peripheral source.

    Across the 788 Mining stories, only a subset of critical minerals pieces explicitly reference AI or artificial intelligence, so tying AI directly to Australian critical minerals suggests operators are moving from pilot‑scale data projects towards mine‑planning and processing decisions influenced by machine learning.

    For Australia‑based critical minerals developers, AI‑driven exploration and processing optimisation is likely to matter most for marginal orebodies and complex mineralogy, where small gains in recovery or drilling success can determine whether projects clear investment hurdles in a high‑cost operating environment.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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