DMT Group

  • After a break of two years, the 10th Essen Expert Meeting on Repository Mining was again held in person and met with great interest

    For the first time in two years, the Essen Expert Discussion on Repository Mining took place again on 8th September 2022, and was very well received (Figure 1). Together with renowned partners, the organizer DMT GROUP, Essen/Germany, discussed current topics of final disposal and offered all participants a forum for the exchange of information and experience. The focus this year was on the final disposal of highly radioactive waste. Not only the situation in Germany was discussed, but also that in the Netherlands and South Korea.

    The long-term safe storage of radioactive residues poses numerous challenges and requires the greatest possible expertise. In addition, country-specific solutions have to be developed, for which different framework conditions have to be taken into account in each case, including geological and topographical conditions.

    After the opening of the expert discussion by Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of the DMT GROUP, four lectures followed, each highlighting different aspects. Steffen Kanitz of the Bundesgesellschaft für Endlagerung (BGE), e. g., spoke about the current status in the search for suitable sites, while Thomas Schröder of the Dutch company NRG reported on deep disposal in the Netherlands. Linus Bettermann from the Gesellschaft Nuklear-Service mbH (GNS) dealt with the topic of “Final storage containers for high-level radioactive waste in Germany” and Oliver Rabe from TÜV Nord EnSys GmbH & Co. KG spoke about the preparation of HAW final disposal in South Korea.

    The presentations were followed by engaging discussions in which the visitors, including representatives from industry, universities and authorities as well as the press, participated lively. In this way, the discussion kept receiving new impetus.

    “The long-term safe final disposal of highly radioactive waste is one of the most challenging tasks of nuclear waste management. The 10th expert talk was a complete success and not only because of the previous forced break. The great interest of the audience was clearly noticeable during the entire event, because a highly topical subject was dealt with here, which is of particular importance today,” commented Lux.

    The date for next year’s event has already been set: 7th September 2023. (DMT/Si.)

  • 16th international MiningForum shows best practices for a sustainable future in the natural resources sector

    Fig. 1. Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT, opened the 16th international MiningForum. // Bild 1. Jens-Peter Lux, Geschäftsführer der DMT, eröffnete das 16. internationale MiningForum. Photo/Foto: DMT Group

    “For a Sustainable Future” was the motto of the international 16th MiningForum and the exhibition hosted by DMT GROUP, Essen/Germany, in Berlin on 19th and 20th May 2022 (Figure 1). The event offered a 360° perspective on all relevant areas of the natural resources sector and was once again held under the patronage of the Ministry of Economics and Climate Protection (BMWK).

    More than 400 decision-makers and experts as well as more than 50 exhibitors came together to exchange information on the latest developments in the natural resources sector, to identify best practices in engineering and consulting and to open up new perspectives for the industry – all under the guiding principle of sustainability. The participants included renowned national and international companies, universities, institutions and associations such as ABB, BAUER, Bundesgesellschaft für Endlagerung (BGE), Herrenknecht, Montanuniversität Leoben, Deutsches Geoforschungszentrum (GFZ), Rheinisch-Westfaelische Technische Hochschule (RWTH) Aachen, Rio Tinto, Siemens, Thyssen Schachtbau, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UN IDO) and Voith. The event was accompanied by an exhibition with 55 participants.

    Under the spotlight of sustainability, the MiningForum covered the entire value chain in the natural resources sector: from exploration, extraction and processing to closures and the renaturation of former mining areas. In addition, the focus was on the consistent development and exploitation of secondary deposits – as well as related technical innovations and best available technologies.

    The forum dealt with central topics for the industry in the area of tension between tradition, sustainability and future viability. This applied specifically to the development of transnational sustainability standards, the creation of a legislative framework and options in the field of sustainable finance. Here, in particular, the commodity sector can be one of the decisive drivers for more sustainability.

    “As an established hub of the natural resources sector, MiningForum combines experience with knowledge and foresight in a world that is characterised more than ever by responsibility towards people and nature,” explains Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT, who opened the conference – together with Michael Kellner, Parliamentary State Secretary at BMWK, and Astrid Petersen, Member of the Board of DMT parent company TÜV NORD AG.

    From the beginning, it became clear that a climate-neutral economy and the achievement of the goals of the European Green Deal are impossible without the use of natural resources. Raw materials are urgently needed for the energy and mobility transition, digitalisation and decarbonisation. The development of sustainable energy resources such as geothermal energy also cannot work without wide-area exploration.

    This meant that above all, the forum was about suitable concepts and solutions to transform the sector sustainably. The sector needs answers to the pressing questions of our time – with a clear vision for the future and a strategy based on emerging technologies and existing expertise.

    “Against the backdrop of political events, the future will be more about in- rather than outsourcing, because Germany is rich in deposits that will gain in importance again. Sustainability means mining and processing with new and further developed methods, e. g., for residue-free potash mining. Only then can we count on acceptance by wider society,” says Michael Seifert, Chairman of the Management Board of SCHACHTBAU NORDHAUSEN GmbH – a company of the BAUER Group.

    The 65 speakers from business, science and politics ensured lively debates – as did the representatives of the partner countries Chile and Australia, who reported on the practices and experiences of their home regions. Overall, the international perspective played a central role, as Prof. Rolf Steltemeier, Director and Head of the Investment and Technology Promotion Office (ITPO) Germany, United Nations Industrial Development Organization, says: “Our speciality is mining in countries outside Europe. We try to support these countries locally – especially through technology transfer. But we also need better controls on the ground. I see German industry, particularly with its supply chains as exemplary here.”

    Over two days, the conference spanned a comprehensive range of complex, commodity-relevant topics and interrelationships, delving into areas such as digitalisation and automation as well as questions of ethics. Special attention was paid to the question of how stability and security can be generated for international supply chains – a topic that has gained in importance in the wake of current geopolitical events, as well as the pandemic.

    The varied programme of lectures was also accompanied by an extensive trade exhibition where companies and organisations presented practice-relevant research results and best practices. An excursion to the “Berlin Underworlds” and the traditional miners’ evening rounded off the event.

    “This year’s international Mining-Forum has made visible the indispensable contribution of the extractive sector to a sustainable world. We are facing up to our responsibility to anchor sustainability as a guiding principle in our business models in every respect. By accepting our task, we can set standards that develop exemplary character beyond our industry and country,” says Maik Tiedemann, CEO of DMT.

    When it comes to meeting the challenges of today and tomorrow, MiningForum leads the way, it has set distinct standards and made it clear that the industry as a whole is well positioned to drive sustainability along the entire value chain in the natural resources sector. (DMT/Si.)

  • Interview with Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of the DMT GROUP and Maik Tiedemann, CEO of the DMT GROUP

    On the occasion of the 16th international MiningForum of DMT GROUP, Essen/Germany, in Berlin, the editor of the Mining Report Glückauf talked to Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT, and Maik Tiedemann, CEO of DMT, Essen/Germany (Figure 1).

    Mining Report Glückauf (MRG): Mr. Lux, this year’s DMT MiningForum was very well attend-ed. To what do you attribute the great interest?

    Jens-Peter Lux: There are two main reasons: MiningForum, with its 360° perspective on all relevant aspects along the value chain in the natural resources sector, is an established event that has attracted an international audience for years. The visitors know: Not only the latest technologies, information and developments can be found here, but the Forum also offers an excellent opportunity to get into conversation with each other and exchange ideas in person with experts and decision-makers from all relevant sectors after the too long Covid break.

    On the other hand, the crucial role of the natural resources sector is becoming more apparent today than ever before. Digitalisation, the energy and mobility transition as well as high-tech applications are not possible without the appropriate natural resources. If the current challenges are to be overcome, natural resources are at the centre.


    MRG: What are the reasons for you to permanently commit to Berlin as a venue?

    Lux: Berlin is an international, easily accessible capital with an international audience. But above all, Berlin is an important hub for European and international politics and stands for innovative strength, diversity and networking, which reflects the character of the event very well. We have therefore made a very conscious decision and actively developed it further in order to be able to guarantee the added value of specialist information in the years to come. It is about nothing less than working together on the big issues of our time.


    MRG: Mr. Tiedemann, as you know, the DMT GROUP has its roots in mining. Today, under the umbrella of TÜV NORD GROUP, you are a globally active engineering and consulting company that also operates successfully in the energy sector, in plant construction or in the infrastructure sector. To what extent do the experience you gained in mining and the associated know-how help you in this?

    Maik Tiedemann: Change is something that has shaped the natural resources sector for decades. It is almost part of everyday life for us to constantly find new answers to changing requirements and framework conditions. Of course, this has helped us a lot in opening up new markets.

    In addition, the technologies used in mining must meet the highest standards in terms of safety, environment and functionality. This means that we often directly fulfil the requirements of other markets, which makes the transfer of know-how and technology correspondingly easy to implement.

    Questions about greater efficiency and higher sustainability have always been very present in mining. As a mining community, as the DMT GROUP, we provide the answers, which can often be transferred very well to other fields of application. We have been doing this very consistently and successfully for many years. Today, with the great breadth and depth of offers and activities, our structures are clearly organised and functional. They offer the flexibility to adapt to new requirements in an agile manner, so that we can quickly offer our customers well thought-out, up-to-date and future-proof solutions across all markets.


    MRG: The motto of this MiningForum is “For a Sustainable Future”. On the one hand, what is your definition of sustainable mining, what goals do you associate with it and what measures do you think will enable you to achieve them, and on the other hand, do you see these sustainability goals possibly endangered by the current upheavals in the (energy) natural resources supply as a result of the war in Ukraine?

    Lux: From extraction to recycling: Our industry plays a key role in the transformation towards a climate-neutral economy. The natural resources sector makes an important contribution to a sustainable world. The importance of natural resources and the functioning of international supply chains have been clearly demonstrated by current geopolitical events, as well as previously by the pandemic. No economic model can do without natural resources – the question is which ones are in focus, what they are used for and under what conditions they are extracted.

    Minerals, e. g., are urgently needed for decarbonisation and the energy and mobility transition. Raw materials are indispensable for progress in digitalisation, the high-tech environment and mobile communication. The development of sustainable energy resources – here geothermal energy – is not possible without wide-area exploration. Technologies for renewable energies such as wind power or photovoltaics require huge quantities of copper, iron or aluminium and also significant quantities of the so-called critical raw materials.

    Mining itself is also becoming more sustainable in all aspects along the value chain. This begins with exploration and extends to extraction and processing, mine closures and the renaturation of former mining areas, and finally to the consistent development and exploitation of “secondary deposits” in the recycling cycle. For the industry, this definitely means a challenge. It is their task to develop and implement a sustainable vision.

    Of course, there are other important aspects of sustainability, because it must be considered holistically – in strategies and communication as well as in processes and technologies. The term ESG, e. g., which is often used at the moment, includes “social” and “governance” in addition to environmental aspects. We also have a responsibility here, especially at the international level. With the leitmotif “For a Sustainable Future”, we want to help shape change: transparently, efficiently and as collaboratively as possible. We are working on new standards that will have an impact worldwide and can set an example beyond the industry.

    Whether ESG – environmental, social, governance – or digitalisation, whether sustainable natural resoruces extraction or long-term strategies: There are numerous challenges to which MiningForum can make a significant contribution.


    MRG: Final question: Where do you see your company in terms of sustainability in ten years’ time?

    Lux: We can safely assume that the path we have taken will be consistently followed across all sectors and markets, and that our activities and portfolio will be characterised by sustainability. To this end, new concepts will be developped and new technologies will be used to shape all internal processes and customer developments in terms of social responsibility, environmental protection and good corporate governance. On this basis, we advise companies, institutions, authorities and ministries worldwide and implement engineering solutions – e. g., on topics such as hydrogen and geothermal energy as well as standards for assessing sustainability. We also support the relevant bodies in creating an adequate legislative framework. All these areas are about sustainability. If we want to achieve common goals, there is a lot to do within the next ten years.

  • DMT GROUP launches digital transformation office for SMEs in mining sector

    DMT GROUP GmbH & Co. KG, Essen/Germany, the global engineering and consultancy group, is launching a new Digital Transformation Office (DTO) to strengthen its support for small and medium sized mining businesses (SMEs) needing to introduce digitalisation across their people, operations, processes and sustainability obligations.

    According to Boston Consulting Group’s (BCG) Digital Acceleration Index (DAI), the metals and mining sector is around 30 to 40 % less digitally mature than comparable industries – such as automotive or chemical. SME mining companies are increasingly required to meet the same compliance obligations around health and safety, ESG, and operational inefficiencies, as more financially secure mining majors, the accurate reporting of which is reliant on digital tools.

    To bridge this “digital divide”, DMT is building on 280 years’ experience working across the mining sector and expanding its digital portfolio of consultancy and engineering services. From owners to operators and investors, DMT will support SME clients to design or implement a digital transformation roadmap, from exploration and operational phases, up to mine closure, rehabilitation and subsequent site use.

    Digitalisation is leading to meaningful operational improvements across the mining sector and enabling companies to maintain resilience amidst new challenges and secure future competitiveness. DMT will provide full-service support through a four-step toolbox: Digital readiness assessment, roadmap creation, digital process engineering and implementation supervision. The four-step strategy provides a comprehensive analysis of a customer’s digital capabilities and priorities and outlines a clear roadmap for implementation so that they can drive transparency and efficiency across their operations, reduce costs and ultimately improve their operations.

    Vassilis Roubos, Head of DMT GROUP Consulting Services, said: “Covid 19 has accelerated digitalisation and automation across a number of sectors. Mining is well poised to benefit from greater use of digital tools, as an industry which demands improved productivity, sustainability, competitiveness, transparency and safety. Digital mining will continue to evolve through tools, methodology and knowledge over the next ten years, but the changes we are already seeing in digitalisation, automation and technology are making the scope of our role more complex and more dynamic. We are excited to be further extending our mining capabilities in line with the changing demands of our clients and are pleased to now assume the role as our clients’ digital transformation office.”

    Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT, said: “Digitalisation is transforming the global mining industry as well – helping drive operational efficiency and leapfrog productivity gaps. In recent years, we’ve seen an increasing demand for digital technologies and solutions within the sector and this has only intensified since the beginning of the pandemic. We are now able to combine our well established experience and expertise with new and innovative digital tools to form a full service offering and deliver bespoke and robust digital solutions for our client. We look forward to seeing our client’s increase the efficiency and sustainability of their operations and advance their business KPIs.”

    DMT will support either as the consultant for use case specific tasks or as a companion alongside the entire digital transformation journey, customizing bespoke packages of third-party solutions for clients technology shifts. Alternatively, DMT can provide its services to meet any specifics the client may need.

    Further information/Weitere Informationen:
    DMT GROUP GmbH & Co. KG
    www.dmt-group.com

  • 16th international MiningForum shows best practices for a sustainable future in the natural resources sector

    “For a Sustainable Future” was the motto of the international 16th MiningForum and the exhibition hosted by DMT Group in Berlin on 19 and 20 May. The event offered a 360-degree perspective on all relevant areas of the natural resources sector and was once again held under the patronage of the Ministry of Economics and Climate Protection (BMWK).

    More than 400 decision-makers and experts as well as more than 50 exhibitors came together to exchange information on the latest developments in the natural resources sector, to identify best practices in engineering and consulting and to open up new perspectives for the industry – all under the guiding principle of sustainability. The participants included renowned national and international companies, universities, institutions and associations such as ABB, BAUER, Bundesgesellschaft für Endlagerung (BGE), Herrenknecht, Montanuniversität Leoben, Deutsches Geoforschungszentrum (GFZ), Rheinisch- Westfaelische Technische Hochschule (RWTH), Rio Tinto, Siemens, Thyssen Schachtbau, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UN IDO) and Voith. The event was accompanied by an exhibition with 55 participants.

    Under the spotlight of sustainability, the MiningForum covered the entire value chain in the natural resources sector: from exploration, extraction and processing to closures and the renaturation of former mining areas. In addition, the focus was on the consistent development and exploitation of secondary deposits – as well as related technical innovations and best available technologies.

    The forum dealt with central topics for the industry in the area of tension between tradition, sustainability and future viability. This applied specifically to the development of transnational sustainability standards, the creation of a legislative framework and options in the field of sustainable finance. Here, in particular, the commodity sector can be one of the decisive drivers for more sustainability.

    “As an established hub of the natural resources sector, MiningForum combines experience with knowledge and foresight in a world that is characterised more than ever by responsibility towards people and nature,” explains Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT Group, who opened the conference – together with Michael Kellner, Parliamentary State Secretary at BMWK, and Dr. Astrid Petersen, Member of the Board of DMT parent company TÜV NORD AG.

    Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director of DMT Group, welcomes the participants of the MiningForum 2022. Photo: DMT Group

    Solutions for the energy transition, digitalisation & Co.

    From the beginning, it became clear that a climate-neutral economy and the achievement of the goals of the European Green Deal are impossible without the use of natural resources. Raw materials are urgently needed for the energy and mobility transition, digitalisation and decarbonisation. The development of sustainable energy resources such as geothermal energy also cannot work without wide-area exploration.

    This meant that above all, the forum was about suitable concepts and solutions to transform the sector sustainably. The sector needs answers to the pressing questions of our time – with a clear vision for the future and a strategy based on emerging technologies and existing expertise.

    “Against the backdrop of political events, the future will be more about in- rather than outsourcing, because Germany is rich in deposits that will gain in importance again. Sustainability means mining and processing with new and further developed methods, e.g., for residue-free potash mining. Only then can we count on acceptance by wider society,” says Michael Seifert, Chairman of the Management Board of SCHACHTBAU NORDHAUSEN GmbH – a company of the BAUER Group.

    Partner countries Australia and Chile

    The 65 speakers from business, science and politics ensured lively debates – as did the representatives of the partner countries Chile and Australia, who reported on the practices and experiences of their home regions. Overall, the international perspective played a central role, as Prof. Dr. Rolf Steltemeier, Director and Head of the Investment and Technology Promotion Office (ITPO) Germany, United Nations Industrial Development Organization, says: “Our speciality is mining in countries outside Europe. We try to support these countries locally – especially through technology transfer. But we also need better controls on the ground. I see German industry, particularly with its supply chains as exemplary here.“

    Over two days, the conference spanned a comprehensive range of complex, commodity- relevant topics and interrelationships, delving into areas such as digitalisation and automation as well as questions of ethics. Special attention was paid to the question of how stability and security can be generated for international supply chains – a topic that has gained in importance in the wake of current geopolitical events, as well as the pandemic.

    The varied programme of lectures was also accompanied by an extensive trade exhibition where companies and organisations presented practice-relevant research results and best practices. An excursion to the “Berlin Underworlds” and the traditional miners’ evening rounded off the event.

    Positive balance

    “This year’s international MiningForum has made visible the indispensable contribution of the extractive sector to a sustainable world. We are facing up to our responsibility to anchor sustainability as a guiding principle in our business models in every respect. By accepting our task, we can set standards that develop exemplary character beyond our industry and country,” says Dr. Maik Tiedemann, CEO of the DMT Group.

    This was reinforced by Jürgen Wallstabe, Senior Manager, Competence Centre for Mining & Resources at the German-Australian Chamber of Industry and Commerce: “For me, MiningForum is the most important and prestigious mining event in Germany, where you can meet all the players in Germany, but also international participants.”

    The results speak for themselves: when it comes to meeting the challenges of today and tomorrow, MiningForum leads the way, it has set distinct standards and made it clear that the industry as a whole is well positioned to drive sustainability along the entire value chain in the natural resources sector.

    Further information:
    DMT Group
    www.dmt-group.com

  • The Natural Resources Sector in Transition: Paths to Sustainability

    When we think of natural resources, most people think of coal, oil and gas, iron ore, copper and gold. Public perception is dominated by their importance in areas such as energy production, steel production and infrastructure – and traditionally, the commodities sector is associated primarily with the extraction of fossil fuels. This is one of the reasons the entire sector is the focus of public discussion – even apart from current events, which above all throw light on the web of international dependencies.


    Author: Jens-Peter Lux, Managing Director, DMT GROUP


    When we think of natural resources, most people think of coal, oil and gas, iron ore, copper and gold. Public perception is dominated by their importance in areas such as energy production, steel production and infrastructure – and traditionally, the commodities sector is associated primarily with the extraction of fossil fuels. This is one of the reasons the entire sector is the focus of public discussion – even apart from current events, which above all throw light on the web of international dependencies.

    There is much less awareness of how much the natural resources extracted through mining now permeate all aspects of our modern lives. Many might be surprised about how many things that are taken for granted would not be possible without mining. This starts with building materials such as gravel and lime, or fertilizer for food production, and extends to the minerals that are indispensable for the mega topics of our time such as digitalization and the energy transition. These, in particular, are steadily gaining in importance and, as things stand today, are difficult or impossible to substitute; recycling cycles on an industrial scale are also still in their infancy.

    The entire natural resources sector is under pressure like no other industry: the energy transition, availability, global supply chains, price developments and our own claim to constantly reduce environmental pollution are key concerns.


    No future without natural resources


    Mining is – contrary to what some populist readings might suggest – clearly an industry of the future. As such, it cannot avoid a central topic: sustainability. The industry ascribes to it a dominant role in the 21st Century. For mining and natural resources procurement, this means a profound change. This is why sustainability is also the focus of this year’s international MiningForum.

    For one of the oldest sectors in the world, this is a considerable challenge, because one thing is clear: without the will to do business more sustainably, technological innovations and a cultural change, mining will have no future. Europe, among others, is already taking a pioneering role here. Good progress is already being made with early citizen participation, fair burden sharing and the use of state-of-the-art technologies to protect people and nature.

    Our aspiration goes even further, however. The sector must work to ensure that, on the one hand, the existing possibilities become the standard as far as possible everywhere and, on the other hand, are always being further developed. The natural resources sector has the potential to become a cross-sectoral pioneer, especially in environmental protection.

    Without natural resources procurement, the future of humanity is uncertain. At the same time, we need to minimize its impact on people and nature. The task now is to realise the change towards sustainability.

    This includes the ability to answer central questions such as: which natural resources can or must be extracted at all in the future? How can this be done according to the ESG (Environmental, Social, Government) criteria? And since the pandemic and the most recent geopolitical tensions, how can international supply chains be made more resilient and one-sided dependencies be avoided?

    To be able to answer these, it is important to understand that almost everything today is interconnected and interrelated. The mining industry must develop such an understanding and implement it on a broad basis. Many players still have room for improvement here – and the following applies: those who move first may take a risk in the short-term – but have clear advantages in the long-term. After all, only those who operate sustainably will ultimately succeed in the long-term.


    Assuming social responsibility


    Sustainability also refers to corporate social responsibility. For the natural resources sector, this means creating the best possible working conditions. It also means broadening the social perspective on projects and ensuring all stakeholders are involved – not only industry representatives and politicians, but also citizens, communities and environmental associations. This alone does not solve any concrete problems, but it can make a decisive contribution. In future, for example, more value creation should take place at the site of natural resources extraction in order to involve the local population more – which will increase the acceptance of companies and make it clear that they are taking their social responsibility seriously. In addition, providing detailed information and giving local communities a say are important. Ideally, projects can be improved for all sides through participation measures.

    Apart from this, large corporations as well as smaller companies have now understood that focusing purely on short-term profit maximisation does not bring them any real advantage in the long run and can even remove them from the market – representing the opposite of sustainability. This not only affects the environment and the people concerned, but also their image and credibility. Since the mining industry in particular already faces reputational challenges with many citizens, it is not only a matter of action, but also of transparency from those industry representatives who are in the public eye.


    Understanding sustainability holistically


    Sustainability must be seen holistically – and this concerns strategies and communication just as much as processes and technologies. In traditional mining, for example, this would mean transparency in natural resources extraction and supply chains and demonstrating that all legal requirements in countries of origin and processing have been implemented and complied with at the highest standards. Social conditions in the extraction of natural resources should also not only meet the requirements, but at best go beyond them.

    In addition, the supply chains themselves must also evolve and more and more green technologies must be used in the development, extraction and processing of natural resources. “Holism” is essential because it is necessary to think through and plan every project – whether greenfield or brownfield – in all aspects from the very beginning to its ultimate dismantling and renaturation. This is precisely where Germany has a head start: the country’s post-mining sector is highly developed. Intensive research is being conducted into how geothermal energy can be used in groundwater after a mine has been closed down, for instance.


    Sustainability made in Germany


    The DMT GROUP has a dedicated sustainability strategy. This involves details such as resource-sensitive behavior in everyday work and ways to shape our overall social effects as positively as possible. However, we also see ourselves as drivers of change through more sophisticated technical solutions. As a service provider to the industry, DMT in particular has many opportunities and levers to accelerate development – not least by using our expertise to help customers become more sustainable themselves: we are experts in the use of hydrogen and are exploring the geothermal potential across Europe.

    Together with TÜV NORD, we are developing the first certification system for sustainability of natural resources along complete value chains. We further advise governments on the design of legislative frameworks for sustainable mining and also evaluate projects for banks, insurance companies and investors from a sustainability perspective. In this way, we drive the sustainability of the sector at all relevant levels from adaptation to new requirements, to technical implementation, as well as from the legal framework to the field of sustainable finance.

    Here, more than anywhere else, it is true that where the know-how is located, there are also the greatest opportunities to achieve truly relevant results. Germany’s pioneering role in this field is both an opportunity and an obligation. Through the ongoing development of our fields of activity and business areas, we succeed in combining sustainability and value creation.

    Whether it’s sustainability in reporting with the corresponding standardization or the proactive involvement of all those involved or affected, many things that seemed hard to imagine ten or twenty years ago are already reality today. And it shows one thing above all: the industry has understood and accepted its responsibility. Understanding complex interrelationships is part of the industry’s DNA – and can thus also provide valuable direction for other sectors.


    Making the switch – with smart technologies


    It is about nothing less than making the transition towards a more environmentally sound use of resources from exploration, extraction and processing through the supply chain to the final product. Natural resources with a poor environmental balance will hardly be marketable in the future, especially as new, highly agile players are entering the field and putting many a top dog in a tight spot.

    Technologies have an important role to play. Fully automated mining – already a reality in many places – and the massive use of digital solutions increase safety and efficiency. The best available technologies are also decisive in the use of minimally invasive mining methods.

    Digital solution approaches come into play at all levels of value creation – such as analyses in the context of development, and seismic ground tests in the respective regions. Whether exploration, mining, monitoring or predictive maintenance, modern technology creates opportunities. However, it is increasingly important to handle the data in a smart way in order to avoid data overkill and instead generate tangible, sustainable added value from the analyses.


    Industry in dialogue – understanding complex interrelationships, and exploiting opportunities


    Openly discussing and sharing these use cases and emerging trends as an industry is critical. Events such as the international MiningForum offer a well-suited platform for this: comprehensive stakeholder networks can be established and cultivated – and, above all, the most urgent questions of the day can be discussed. These include: How can access to natural resources be secured for all people in a sustainable and stable manner? And kow can availability be guaranteed so that ambitious projects such as the electrified transport transition can be realised?

    In doing so, the participants of the forum act at a considerable “flying height”, ensuring a 360-degree perspective on all relevant topics – and also making the event a role model that can set an example for other industries.


    The MiningForum takes place on the 19th and 20th May at the Estrel Berlin.

    Further information:
    www.the-miningforum.com


  • DMT GROUP explores Europe’s geothermal energy potential in development of the European Green Deal

    DMT GROUP, Essen/Germany, a global engineering and consultancy group, is playing a central role in efforts to explore geothermal energy potential across North-West Europe. DMT is providing expertise in seismic measurement, boreholes and data evaluation to further the ambitions of the European Green Deal.

    DMT is committed to working with partners across Europe to harness the region’s untapped renewable energy source and foster the expansion of deep geothermal energy as an environmentally friendly resource. DMT’s work is currently supporting the “Geothermal Paper Drying” research project and the “Deep Geothermal Energy Rollout in North West Europe” (DGE-ROLLOUT).

    Fig. 1. Geothermal heat-flow. Source: DMT

    Deep geothermal energy is one of the most climate-friendly and efficient methods of supplying heating to entire city districts (Figure 1). Demand for heating currently accounts for 53 % of the energy consumption of North-West Europe, of which only 2.5 % comes from renewable sources. Deep geothermal energy provides a stable and sustainable transition away from oil and gas and offers enormous potential to help achieve the climate goals of the European Green Deal.

    The Geothermal Paper Drying Project is being carried out by Kabel Premium Pulp & Paper within the framework of the “Kabel ZERO” initiative. The project is assessing the possibility of using geothermal heat from the ground under the city of Hagen to generate a large proportion of the steam used paper manufacturing – around 500,000 MWh/a on the basis of natural gas – and shape the energy transition towards renewables. DMT is supporting this exploration work through geological investigations utilising environmental-friendly 2D seismic surveys and vibro-trucks to determine deep geothermal energy of the Devonian mass limestones at depths of up to 4,000 m.

    DMT is also supporting the DGE-ROLLOUT, an EU project running from 2018 to 2022 to facilitate the use of deep geothermal energy as a climate friendly resource in North-West Europe. DMT’s experts are harnessing and evaluating data from seismic measurements and deep boreholes up to 50 years old in the Munsterland region in order to determine the geothermal potential in the subsurface. DMT was awarded the tender by the Geological Survey of NRW, and is working as one of 20 stakeholders from six countries to make geothermal energy in North-West Europe viable from a technical and economic standpoint, and ensure it is accepted by the wider society.

    Silke Bißmann, Geologist and Project Manager at DMT said: “Deep geothermal energy is vital to our transition away from fossil fuels and helping global efforts to mitigate climate change. DMT is pleased to be utilising around 30 years of international experience in geothermal energy and over 100 years experience in resource exploration to provide comprehensive support to several pioneering projects that are changing the game for energy use in North-West Europe. We look forward to continuing working with our project partners and other stakeholders as make progress towards our common mission to harness deep geothermal energy, reduce CO2 emissions, and protect the environment in North-West Europe and beyond.” (DMT/Si.)

  • World’s First Augmented Reality Remote Rope Inspection Testing Service

    DMT GROUP has announced the expansion of its digital service offering with a new capability in remote rope inspection. This follows the successful completion of a first test-run on a transmission mast of Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR), Europe’s second largest media company. DMT is the first company in the world to offer remotely assisted non-destructive rope inspections – delivering benefits in terms of efficiency, accessibility and sustainability.

    The latest development is a collaboration with the in-house rope testing centre in Bochum, and enables DMT to provide high-quality and non-destructive remote inspection for magnetic induction rope testing from anywhere in the world, with the assistance of augmented reality (AR) technology. Communication between the remote DMT specialists and the inspectors on-site takes place with the aid of AR glasses and a platform on which the data is temporarily stored for further processing. The AR glasses transmit the images of the inspection work on the ropes to Essen, enabling DMT’s team to explain manual operations or information to the inspectors on-site using visual representations.

    Dominik Bartsch, expert at DMT’s Rope Testing Centre said: “As a rule, we conduct on-site rope testing in pairs or threes with the support of the customer on site. That means an enormous amount of planning each time – who has time when, what the weather will be like, what equipment will be needed. Remote rope testing shrinks the planning effort to a minimum, saves timae, and makes the process much more efficient. In the shipping industry, the rope test is a prerequisite for companies to be allowed to use their cranes in various projects, yet carrying out an audit is enormously time-consuming, as certain experts have to travel from ship to ship all over the world to do so. The field of application for rope testing also extends to hoisting cables, crane cables, cable cars, bridge wire ropes, anchoring and offshore wire ropes. Our expanded remote rope inspection capabilities unlock new possibilities for our clients and enable us to deliver high quality safety services in an efficient and sustainable manner.

    In order to maintain the usual high level of expertise and quality of DMT’s specialist safety office – the Rope Inspection Centre – remote rope inspections will be offered in future with the help of specially trained and instructed inspectors from service p<artners on site; for this purpose, the inspection equipment and AR glasses will be sent to the customer.”

    Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, a series of travel restrictions has severely limited experts, subcontractors and international consultants to deliver essential safety services. Further, according to Statista over 55 billion euros are spent annually by Germany companies on employee travel before the pandemic – and companies are now increasingly looking at ways to drive operational efficiency whilst reducing their environmental impact.

    Reflecting on this, Margareta Spajic, Project Manager in the Digital Business Development & Technologies, DMT GmbH and Co. KG, said: “Minimising the number of trips consultants can contribute significantly to the sustainability of a company. It makes a difference to the carbon footprint when three or four employees no longer have to travel to the ends of the earth for each order. Likewise, more jobs can be done in the same amount of time and new markets can be opened up geographically where we previously had not yet been able to offer our services.”

    The solution comes directly from the digitalisation incubator within DMT titled: Remote Work. The Digitalisation office has supported many projects for example the Internet of Things (IoT) construction monitoring platform ‘DMT SAFEGUARD’ which is now in use worldwide.

    DMT will provide its remote rope inspection later this year, when a bridge test is scheduled in Taiwan. Additional ideas for using remote inspection in mining and quarrying projects are under development.

    Further information:
    DMT Group
    www.dmt-group.com

  • NEXT – New Exploration Technologies project exceeds expectations

    The European Union Horizon 2020 project NEXT, was created to develop new geomodels, novel sensitive exploration technologies and data analysis methods which together are fast, cost- effective, environmentally safe, and potentially more acceptable to local actors and communities.

    “The NEXT project has not only been successful but exceeded expectations. NEXT results have been already used by mineral exploration companies with a great success”, says Science Coordinator Vesa Nykänen from Geological Survey of Finland (GTK).

    Great achievements

    “We had seven work packages and ten objectives to start with. Results show that cooperation between partners has been fruitful and we have achieved excellent results in all work packages”, says Project Manager Juha Kaija from GTK. “Several outcomes from the project bring innovative

    methods into mineral exploration and, most importantly, improve target generation and have the ability to increase the exploration productivity”, states Exploitation Manager Torsten Gorka from DMT GmbH & Co. KG.

    One of its outcomes has already been picked by European Commission Innovation Radar. Independent experts of the Innovation Radar ranked the Novel electromagnetic (EM) survey system on UAV for mineral exploration, as a top innovation product developed in the NEXT project with a high market potential in the near future. “This survey system is a remarkable result of the NEXT project. The Finnish company Radai Oy started the development of it within the NEXT project and already it has proven to be highly versatile. Now the team at the Radai SME are developing the system further for commercial use”, Nykänen explains.

    The other remarkable achievement of NEXT are the SOM (Self-Organizing Maps) Software Tools. The aim in the NEXT Project was to develop a new modern software and tools for data processing and integration. A new open-source software tool, GisSOM, for geoscientific data integration in combination with artificial neural works and self-organizing maps is available in GitHub.

    “GTK and the German company BEAK worked jointly to create data fusion tools. GTK is responsible for the open-source SOM software tool and the BEAK is keen to develop it further for commercial use in their advangeo® software suite”, Nykänen explains.

    An impressive number of publications

    “The large number of publications in the project is particularly gratifying. There are more than 40 peer reviewed articles already published or submitted to scientific journals in the NEXT project”, informs Nykänen. All the publications will be released on open access platforms.

    Social License to Explore (SLE) is nowadays an important element of exploration activities. In the NEXT project, three case studies in different contextual settings in Sweden and Finland were explored. Interviews with local organized actors and surveys among the local residents were conducted to investigate which factors shape a local communities’ attitudes towards mineral exploration. This research concluded that new sensitive technologies are generally welcomed by local people, but other factors affecting local actors’ attitudes are more important.

    Proactive information and active community engagement at the outset of a project can help build good relations and hand on demonstrations of the new technologies can generate active interest among local actors. The outcomes of the research on the SLE thematic as well as write-ups on the new tools and improved insights on the way ore deposits are formed have been collected in the NEXT Practical Toolkit addressed to mineral exploration and mining companies. This publication has been purposely written in an easy-to-grasp language and is complemented with recommendations which are foremost addressed to mineral exploration companies about what to communicate about the new exploration technologies, why, how, when and where during the mineral exploration stages.

    Help for clustering

    Clustering with other ongoing EU funded projects was one of the objectives of the NEXT project. Although not originally foreseen at the outset, the NEXT project developed a new open-access module “Projects Map” on the Cordis portal. This was achieved through the active cooperation of the Community Research and Development Information Service (CORDIS) team, based in Luxembourg and the University of Lorraine in France. The new module, https://cordis.europa.eu/datalab/p2co.php?lv=en, allows to explore synergies in a highly efficient manner and should prove valuable not only to the domain of mineral exploration and mining, since the search function permits to look for potential synergies on any topic of scientific research the “jungle” of EU funded research projects.

    The NEXT consortium was coordinated by the Geological Survey of Finland (GTK) and consisted of 16 partners from research institutes, academia, service providers and mining industry from the six EU member states Finland, Sweden, Germany, France, Malta and Spain. The NEXT budget amounted to 6.9 Million Euro, funded through the Horizon2020 Framework Programme.

    The NEXT Final Event took place in September 2021.

    Further information:
    https://new-exploration.tech/

  • DMT GROUP launches critical infrastructure dashboard for supporting indispensable key systems

    DMT GmbH & Co. KG, Essen/Germany, has launched a new online resource to support domestic and international owners and operators of critical infrastructure, offering a full portfolio of supporting services for vital systems and assets including power stations, healthcare facilities, roads, waterways, bridges and tunnels.

    DMT’s online platform offers a broad spectrum of engineering and consultancy services designed to plan, build, support and maintain critical infrastructure across administration, energy, transport, health, and water. This platform will act as a one-stop information touchpoint for all stakeholders. DMT’s offering ensures that industries have access to reliable services in close digital or virtual proximity to their assets, providing remote and on-site services to enable consistent support for critical assets internationally.

    Throughout 2020, a series of travel and entry restrictions have severely reduced international mobility, and limited access for foreign nationals travelling via air, rail, water and road. Many owners and people responsible for critical infrastructure rely on different subcontractors and international consultants to deliver and monitoring and critical services, the provision of which has been severely affected by the Covid-19 restrictions. As countries consider further lockdown actions into 2021, DMT’s agile “Resilience Matters” approach offers comprehensive in-house support, ensuring the continuity of service regardless of current and future periods of uncertainty.

    DMT is also proposing a new set of minimum mandatory criteria for engineering and consultancy around critical infrastructure to improve the resilience of assets and systems. The criteria are: proximity to assets, advanced digitisation status, redundant reserves, agility, completeness of in-house service offering, personnel contingency, and long term relationships. DMT’s own history of prioritising long-term partnerships with asset owners has built trust, continuity and familiarity, which places its remote services in parity with an in-person approach.

    Further information/Weitere Informationen:
    DMT GmbH & Co. KG
    www.dmt-group.com

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