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    Planning Inspectorate NSIP reforms: consent timeline impacts for project teams
    Policy
    4 months ago

    Planning Inspectorate NSIP reforms: consent timeline impacts for project teams

    The Planning Inspectorate is introducing new digital tools and revised procedures to speed up consenting for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects (NSIPs), aiming to cut overall examination and decision times while maintaining statutory consultation requirements. Measures include expanded use of online portals for document submission and evidence management, greater standardisation of environmental impact assessment templates, and earlier issue resolution through structured pre-application engagement. For major energy, transport and water schemes, faster and more predictable Development Consent Order timelines could materially reduce holding costs, contractor mobilisation risks and programme float tied to planning uncertainty.

    Network Rail £450M Scotland electrification: design and civils notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Network Rail £450M Scotland electrification: design and civils notes for engineers

    Network Rail has issued a prior information notice for a £450M Scotland’s Railway Electrification Framework, signalling a multi-year programme to extend 25kV overhead line equipment as part of Scotland’s rail decarbonisation plan. The framework is expected to cover design, civils and structures, mast and portal installations, feeder stations and sectioning cabins across multiple routes, with contractors needing proven experience in live-rail possessions and integration with existing signalling and structures. Geotechnical and civil packages are likely to include new foundations, bridge parapet and clearance modifications, and structural assessments for increased electrical clearances.

    Bristol–Airport mass transit: early design and corridor risks for project teams
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Bristol–Airport mass transit: early design and corridor risks for project teams

    Construction of a new mass transit link between Bristol city centre and Bristol Airport is being prioritised by the West of England Combined Authority, with construction targeted to begin within four to five years. The scheme is expected to provide a high-capacity, segregated corridor along the heavily congested A38 route, replacing or supplementing existing bus services that currently face peak-hour delays. Early work will need to address tight urban corridors, airport security and access constraints, and integration with Bristol’s wider public transport upgrades.

    Alkane’s strongest quarter post‑Mandalay merger: planning lessons for mine engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Alkane’s strongest quarter post‑Mandalay merger: planning lessons for mine engineers

    Alkane Resources has posted what it calls the strongest quarter in its history after its August 2025 merger with Mandalay Resources, consolidating the Tomingley gold operation in NSW with two Mandalay underground gold–antimony mines into a three-mine portfolio. The enlarged group has focused on higher-grade stopes, tighter unit-cost control and shared technical services across the sites, lifting group mill throughput and gold-equivalent output while cutting all-in sustaining costs. For mine planners and geotechs, the integration is driving more aggressive cut-off grade strategies and coordinated underground scheduling across multiple orebodies.

    True North Cloncurry resource update: pit and UG envelopes for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    True North Cloncurry resource update: pit and UG envelopes for mine planners

    Exploration activity is accelerating across Australia, with recent campaigns reporting high-grade intercepts in gold, tungsten and critical minerals and several new drill targets defined from geophysics and geochemistry. True North Copper has updated its resource at Cloncurry in Queensland, refining copper and gold tonnages and grades across multiple lodes and signalling scope for further step-out drilling. For geotechs and mine planners, the work points to expanding pit and underground envelopes in established districts rather than purely greenfield growth.

    Helical piles vs concrete foundations: design and constructability notes for tower engineers
    Geotechnical
    4 months ago

    Helical piles vs concrete foundations: design and constructability notes for tower engineers

    Helical piles are being positioned as an alternative to traditional drilled or spread concrete foundations for lattice and monopole communication towers, particularly where uplift, lateral loads and variable soils control design. Screw-in steel piles with helix plates can be installed with smaller rigs, generate minimal spoil, allow immediate loading and are removable at decommissioning, contrasting with large-diameter drilled shafts or pad-and-pier systems that require curing time and substantial excavation. The comparison focuses on sites with constrained access, weak or layered soils, and projects needing rapid deployment or future relocation.

    Sandvik–JCHX global cooperation: underground fleet and project impacts for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Sandvik–JCHX global cooperation: underground fleet and project impacts for engineers

    Sandvik Group has signed a new global strategic cooperation agreement with Chinese contract mining major JCHX in Beijing, following a visit by Sandvik President and CEO Stefan Widing to JCHX’s headquarters on 11 February. JCHX Chairman Wang Xiancheng and Executive Vice President Wang Cicheng hosted the talks, where both parties agreed to expand the breadth and depth of their collaboration across underground mining equipment and services. The deal signals closer alignment between Sandvik’s OEM capabilities and JCHX’s large-scale contract mining projects in China and overseas.

    Sripath at 20 years: asphalt additive performance lessons for road engineers
    Materials
    4 months ago

    Sripath at 20 years: asphalt additive performance lessons for road engineers

    Sripath Technologies is marking 20 years of supplying specialised asphalt additives and modifier technologies to the global road construction and maintenance sector, with a focus on performance and cost efficiency. The company’s portfolio includes products such as rejuvenators and polymer modifiers designed to improve rutting resistance, fatigue life and workability, while enabling higher reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) contents. Its long-term commercial track record signals growing confidence in engineered additives as a route to more durable, lower‑carbon pavements without major changes to existing plant or laying practices.

    NSW Demerit Point Reward Program: behavioural safety lever for road engineers
    Policy
    4 months ago

    NSW Demerit Point Reward Program: behavioural safety lever for road engineers

    New South Wales has introduced a bill to make its Demerit Point Reward Program permanent, following a trial that began in 2023 to encourage safer driving behaviour. The scheme rewards motorists who avoid new offences over a defined period by restoring demerit points, directly affecting licence suspension thresholds and enforcement loads on the road network. For road and traffic engineers, the programme’s permanence would lock in a behavioural lever that can be modelled alongside physical safety upgrades, speed zoning and enforcement camera placement.

    Komatsu remanufacturing in Australia: lifecycle and downtime gains for mine fleets
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Komatsu remanufacturing in Australia: lifecycle and downtime gains for mine fleets

    Komatsu is expanding a national network for parts recycling and re-manufacture, using dedicated component workshops and centralised core collection to return engines, hydraulic pumps and driveline assemblies to OEM specification. The programme, developed over more than 30 years, focuses on heavy civil and mining fleets, offering factory-certified reman components with standard new-part warranties and controlled turnaround times to reduce machine downtime. For contractors and asset owners, the approach cuts lifecycle costs, lowers embodied carbon in major components and supports more predictable maintenance planning on high-hour equipment.

    BFCG precision components in WA mines: reliability and weighing lessons for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    BFCG precision components in WA mines: reliability and weighing lessons for engineers

    BFCG is supplying Western Australian mines with high-specification materials handling and processing components from drill string hardware through to weighbridge systems, targeting tighter tolerances and longer service life in abrasive ore conditions. The company focuses on precision-machined parts, fit-for-purpose alloys and coatings, and accurate load measurement to reduce unplanned downtime and mis-weighing at high-throughput sites. For maintenance and reliability teams, the approach supports more predictable wear behaviour, cleaner data for production accounting, and better integration between pit equipment and fixed plant.

    Schlam green steel truck beds: Scope 3 haulage impacts explained for mine teams
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Schlam green steel truck beds: Scope 3 haulage impacts explained for mine teams

    Schlam Payload has launched what it calls the world’s first mining truck bodies manufactured from green steel, integrating low‑emissions steel plate into its Hercules open‑pit haul truck trays. The design retains the Hercules’ ultra‑lightweight, high‑volume profile for large rigid dump trucks while substituting conventional plate with certified low‑carbon steel from SSAB’s HYBRIT-based supply chain. For mine operators, the move offers a direct Scope 3 emissions reduction lever on load-and-haul fleets without redesigning truck chassis, payload envelopes or existing maintenance practices.

    Alligator Energy’s Samphire BFS: ISR design and hydrogeology notes for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Alligator Energy’s Samphire BFS: ISR design and hydrogeology notes for engineers

    Alligator Energy has started a bankable feasibility study (BFS) on its Samphire uranium project near Whyalla in South Australia, moving the in‑situ recovery (ISR) development closer to a final investment decision as uranium prices trade near 15‑year highs. The BFS will refine wellfield layouts, leach chemistry and processing flowsheets for the Blackbush and Plumbush deposits, building on previous ISR field trials and updated JORC resources. For geotechnical and hydrogeological teams, the work will focus on aquifer characterisation, permeability controls and containment of lixiviant within the target sandstone units.

    FLS Mackay hub for Bowen Basin: maintenance and downtime impacts for miners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    FLS Mackay hub for Bowen Basin: maintenance and downtime impacts for miners

    FLS has opened a large-scale service centre in Mackay, central to the Bowen Basin coalfields, to cut shutdown durations for Queensland miners by bringing overhaul capability for crushers, mills and vibrating screens closer to site. The modern workshop is sized for major components such as SAG mill heads and large cone crusher shells, with overhead lifting, specialised machining and condition-monitoring support integrated under one roof. Locating this capacity in Mackay reduces freight time for heavy equipment, enabling faster turnaround on wear parts and planned maintenance campaigns.

    Sandover ultra high-grade fluorite for Tivan: resource and flowsheet notes for planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Sandover ultra high-grade fluorite for Tivan: resource and flowsheet notes for planners

    Ultra high-grade fluorite intercepts from Tivan Limited’s maiden drilling at the Sandover project in the Northern Territory show multiple drill holes returning exceptionally rich mineralisation, positioning the asset as a potentially significant fluorite source. The results come from the first systematic programme over the Sandover tenements, targeting structurally controlled fluorite-bearing zones identified in earlier surface work. For geologists and mine planners, the continuity and grade across several holes will drive follow-up drilling, resource definition and early thinking on beneficiation flowsheets for high-purity CaF₂ products.

    Canada’s critical minerals race with the US: infrastructure and permitting lens
    Policy
    4 months ago

    Canada’s critical minerals race with the US: infrastructure and permitting lens

    Canada’s critical minerals push is lagging US urgency, with Washington proposing a US$12‑billion “Project Vault” stockpile and even floating single‑month permitting for strategic mines, while Canadian approvals remain “glacial”. Anthony Vaccaro argues Canada’s C$4‑billion Critical Minerals Strategy, 26 G7 Production Alliance-backed investments and talk of a Critical Minerals Sovereign Fund still lack the execution speed needed to convert world-class lithium, graphite, nickel and rare earth deposits into processing capacity. He warns that without rapid permitting reform and Arctic infrastructure – ports, rail, grids and logistics – Canada risks ceding geopolitical leverage to China and faster-moving allies.

    i-80 Gold’s US$500M Nevada plan: production, capex and risk notes for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    i-80 Gold’s US$500M Nevada plan: production, capex and risk notes for mine planners

    i-80 Gold has secured a US$500 million package, including a US$250 million life-of-mine NSR royalty sale to Franco-Nevada (1.5%, rising to 3% from 2031) and a US$150 million gold prepay facility with National Bank and Macquarie plus a US$100 million accordion, to fund its Nevada growth plan and clear roughly US$175 million of debt. The financing is expected to fully fund Phase 1 and Phase 2, ramping Granite Creek, advancing Archimedes, and expanding Cove underground and the Granite Creek open pit to lift output from ~50,000 oz/year to 300,000–400,000 oz/year by 2031. Longer term, i-80 aims to develop the Mineral Point oxide heap leach project, which has 4.6 million oz Au-eq (measured and indicated) and a PEA outlining a 17-year life at 282,000 oz Au-eq/year, targeting total production of 600,000 oz/year across four Nevada operations.

    Fortescue battery trains in Western Australia: haulage design and energy notes for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Fortescue battery trains in Western Australia: haulage design and energy notes for engineers

    Fortescue has commissioned two Progress Rail battery electric locomotives in the Pilbara, each with a 14.5MWh onboard battery and 40–60% regenerative braking, to haul 40,000-tonne iron ore trains over 300–400km and cut about one million litres of diesel use per year. The units will run on renewable power from the Pilbara Energy Connect network, which already includes a 100MW solar farm with a 250MWh BESS at North Star Junction and a 760km electrified rail corridor linking five mines to Port Hedland. Fortescue is concurrently advancing 190–644MW-scale solar projects, its first Pilbara wind farm at Nullagine, and a green iron plant at Christmas Creek targeting first metal by June 2026.

    Vizsla’s Panuco project: security shock, cost and schedule risks for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Vizsla’s Panuco project: security shock, cost and schedule risks for mine planners

    Vizsla Silver is keeping its long-term development plans for the Panuco silver-gold project in Sinaloa after 10 workers were kidnapped on 23 January, at least five killed and five still missing, with site operations suspended but engineering work continuing remotely. Panuco hosts 12.8 million proven and probable tonnes grading 2.01 g/t gold and 249 g/t silver, with a planned 9.4‑year mine life producing 17.4 million silver‑equivalent oz. per year at an AISC of $10.61/oz and over 20 million oz. annually in the first five years. National Bank Financial now expects first production to slip from 2027 to around 2030 and warns security, labour and inflation could add up to $5/t to costs, as more than 1,000 Mexican troops and elite marines remain deployed in the district.

    Copper price and decade‑low smelting activity: supply risks explained for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Copper price and decade‑low smelting activity: supply risks explained for mine planners

    Copper for March delivery fell over 3% in New York to $5.78/lb ($12,740/t) as Earth‑i’s SAVANT index showed 14.3% of global copper smelting capacity inactive in January, the weakest level in nearly a decade and 6.8% above the three‑year average. Active capacity outside China is down 1.2 Mt year‑on‑year, driven by outages at Isabel Leyte (PASAR) in the Philippines, Gresik and Manyar in Indonesia after the Grasberg mud‑rush, and Salvador (Potrerillos) in Chile, while Africa’s inactivity jumped to 28.4%. Spot TCRCs have turned deeply negative near –$45/t and –4.5¢/lb, with Antofagasta’s 2026 benchmark TC/RC with a Chinese smelter settling at $0, effectively wiping out smelter margins and signalling further curtailments unless concentrate supply normalises.

    Sandvik–ThoroughTec Simulation deal: data-driven training takeaways for mine teams
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Sandvik–ThoroughTec Simulation deal: data-driven training takeaways for mine teams

    Sandvik is acquiring South African-based ThoroughTec Simulation, an OEM-agnostic mining training simulator specialist with about 200 staff and 2025 revenues of roughly SEK 170 million, to be folded into Sandvik Mining and Rock Solutions’ parts and services division. ThoroughTec’s simulators and training management system will be combined with Sandvik’s digital solutions to deliver data-driven, customised operator training based on real machine performance, targeting higher productivity, improved operator behaviour and lower maintenance costs. The deal, with an undisclosed price, is expected to close in Q2 2026 and be EBITA-margin accretive.

    Gold price drops 3% on US jobs data beat: planning notes for mine projects
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Gold price drops 3% on US jobs data beat: planning notes for mine projects

    Gold fell back below $5,000/oz on Thursday, dropping as much as 4% to $4,880 before stabilising above $4,900 for a 3% intraday loss, after stronger-than-expected US nonfarm payrolls data showed a 130,000 January jobs gain and unemployment easing to 4.3%. Silver slid nearly 10% as profit-taking on 12‑month gains of about 40% for gold and 160% for silver, plus stop-loss orders clustered below $5,000 and above $5,100, triggered a rapid cascade. Despite January’s historic selloff, bullion remains 17% higher year-to-date, with several banks still projecting up to $6,000/oz on continued central bank and retail demand.

    Panama Canal Mixshield undercrossing: design and tunnelling lessons for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Panama Canal Mixshield undercrossing: design and tunnelling lessons for engineers

    A 13.46m diameter Herrenknecht Mixshield TBM has broken through into the future Balboa station on Panama Metro Line 3 after completing the first-ever TBM undercrossing of the Panama Canal at depths exceeding 60m below sea level. The 5,600kW, 26,616kNm machine, fitted with an accessible cutterhead and more than 4,500 sensors linked via the Herrenknecht.Connected platform, has achieved peak advance of 150 segment rings (about 300m) per month through mixed sandstone, tuff, breccias and basalt. Around 1.5km of the 4.5km twin-track tunnel remains to final breakthrough.

    Liverpool Street Station £1bn redevelopment: design and capacity notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Liverpool Street Station £1bn redevelopment: design and capacity notes for engineers

    Approval of a £1bn redevelopment will expand Liverpool Street Station’s capacity from today’s 98 million passengers a year towards more than 200 million, responding to a forecast 35% rise to 158 million by 2041. The Network Rail scheme, with Aecom as lead consulting engineer alongside Platform4 and Acme, focuses on improved access, circulation and accessibility while adding new commercial, cultural and public spaces. Design development has been driven by detailed heritage assessments, multi‑disciplinary engineering and formal environmental impact assessments.

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