A Review of Long- and Short-Term Production Scheduling at Lkab’s Kiruna Mine
Alexandra M. Newman,
Michael Martinez and
Mark Kuchta
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Alexandra M. Newman: Colorado School of Mines
Michael Martinez: Colorado School of Mines
Mark Kuchta: Colorado School of Mines
Chapter Chapter 11 in Handbook of Production Scheduling, 2006, pp 265-286 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract LKAB’s Kiruna Mine, located in northern Sweden, produces about 24 million tons of iron ore yearly using an underground mining method known as sublevel caving. To aid in its ore mining and processing system, Kiruna has adopted the use of several types of multi-period production scheduling models that have some distinguishing characteristics, for example: (i) specific rules governing the way in which the ore is extracted from the mine; (ii) lack of an inventory holding policy; and (iii) decisions that are not explicitly cost-based. In this chapter, we review two models in use at Kiruna and three techniques we have employed to expedite solution time, support the efficacy of these techniques with numerical results, and provide a corresponding discussion.
Keywords: Integer programming; production scheduling; underground mining; applications (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2006
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:isochp:978-0-387-33117-1_11
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DOI: 10.1007/0-387-33117-4_11
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