Skip to content Skip to footer

Westmoreland boosts productivity with drone mine surveys [case study]

Westmoreland boosts productivity with drone mine surveys [case study]

Westmoreland Mining LLC. is a 150 year-old energy firm with its roots in the coal fields of Pennsylvania. Over the years, its operations have grown to span North America, where it provides energy as well as creating jobs and enhancing communities.

The company has evolved through the Civil War, the two World Wars and the Great Depression, surviving a transformed marketplace and political landscape.

A big key to the company’s longevity has been its ability to adapt. So it’s no wonder that the firm was already exploring drone technology back in 2014. About a year and a half ago, it upgraded to WingtraOne to enhance safety and boost productivity of its mining operations.

Specifically, drone coal mine surveys help Westomoreland calculate stockpile volumes, road widths, dragline operations and the amount of reclamation they have done to meet sustainability goals.

 

Application

Camera

Country

Challenge

Active mine site requires reliable drone, safety issues around manual coal volume measurement, massive coverage and high-accuracy requirements

We’ve used other techniques, but by far drones are the most accurate, and with WingtraOne we can map an entire pit in less than an hour. When we did it manually, we’d spend four or five hours walking the entire pit. Now, it’s more accurate and takes about 30 minutes.

Albert Wang
Engineering Co-op Student at Westmoreland Mining LLC.

How drone mining surveys optimize workflows

In Westmoreland’s massive Estevan coal mine complex, in Saskatchewan, Canada, drone pilots fly WingtraOne about three times a week to uate pits. They are especially keen to get stockpile volumetrics from mining drone data so that operations can run smoothly based on precise estimates of what needs to be moved and when.

“Surveyors used to use a GPS to manually record hundreds of data points,” Wang said. “But they couldn’t effectively survey the side slopes due to safety concerns. Now we can safely get millions of points with the drone in about 15 minutes vs. the two hours it used to take to do manually with a GPS. We save time and get a more precise value of the tons of coal we have.”

Each of the four pits at the Estevan complex takes about a half hour in total to fly with WingtraOne. The horizontal and vertical accuracy aim is between 2 and 4 cm (0.8 and 1.6 in). Wang said WingtraOne captures this consistently, enabling regular updates with high-quality map outputs. The drone-data-based coal mine maps are used by Westmoreland’s technical services department as well as SaskPower—the power company for Saskatchewan.

“This added level of accuracy also allows us to load the data into 3D modelling and design programs,” Wang said. “We then use it to create more accurate designs, which we send out to our GPS-guided equipment.”  

I’m impressed by the level of detail we capture with WingtraOne’s RX1R II camera. The features you pick up from the orthomosaics is insane; way better than what we had before. It’s really good for safety as well: you see what’s happening in detail and avoid obstructing operations on a busy site with all of its heavy equipment.

Kurtis Popkie
Junior Mine Geologist at Westmoreland Mining LLC.

Leave a comment

0.0/5