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Short-term supply and demand of graduate mining engineers in Australia

Peter F. Knights ()
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Peter F. Knights: The University of Queensland

Mineral Economics, 2020, vol. 33, issue 1, No 20, 245-251

Abstract: Abstract This study advances a means for estimating the short-term demand for Australian graduate mining engineers using simple linear correlation with mining “building and structure” capital expenditures. Although only a loose correlation was achieved, the method is comparable with the current methods which either assume employment growth rates or calculate them by applying auto regressive integrated moving averages to time series data. The latter can fail to adequately reflect rapid changes due to commodity price cycles. Using the new model, it is possible to estimate that Australia requires approximately 160 mining engineering graduates per year over the next 3 years. The deficit in mining engineering graduate numbers is likely to be around 60 this year, climbing to 90 in 2021. The Australian mining industry therefor faces a shortfall of graduates. The mining industry will look to attract mining engineers under the Australian government’s skilled immigration program. However, Australian mining companies will essentially be competing with North American mining companies for scarce talent. For large surface mining operations involving bulk earth movement, the industry will look to substitute graduate mining engineers with graduate civil engineers. Because of the shortage of graduate mining engineers in North America, underground metalliferous mines are likely to draw expertise from Latin American and African countries, most notably Peru, South Africa, and Ghana. Underground longwall coal mines are likely to source foreign mining engineering graduates from Turkey, Poland, Germany, Ukraine, and Russia. In bulk mining operations, technology is changing some of the planning and operational roles currently conducted by young graduate mining engineers. Some routine planning tasks (for example, drill and blasting planning for strata deposits) are becoming transactional in nature. Remote operating centers are changing operational roles that were traditionally the domain of young graduate mining engineers.

Keywords: Graduate mining engineers; Mining industry; Short term supply and demand (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
References: View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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DOI: 10.1007/s13563-019-00208-0

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