For years, fixed plant design in mining, including crushers, mills, and processing systems, was all about one thing: maximizing capacity. Increasing capacity meant increasing production, lowering unit costs, and hence better economics. But the rules of the game are rapidly changing. The question is no longer about maximizing capacity in fixed plant design in mining. The question is, should flexibility be prioritized in fixed plant design in mining?
In years past, plant design was focused solely on maximizing capacity. The assumption was that conditions in mines were stable. Ore supply was predictable, mine life was long, and investors wanted maximum capacity. Crushers, mills, and processing systems were designed to maximize capacity. Large crushers, large mills, and streamlined processing systems were the norm. Scale economies could mean huge reductions in operating costs. But mines today are different. Ore types vary, grades vary, and commodity prices fluctuate.
Environmental regulations change, and unexpected events happen. The answer is flexibility. Modular processing systems, variable capacity crushers, and the ability to process different ores are needed. This flexibility allows mines to respond to changing conditions without costly redesign or long shutdowns.
This is a classic trade-off in engineering. The plant designed solely for maximum capacity might operate beautifully under optimal conditions. But when conditions change, it might struggle.
The plant designed for flexibility might be more costly upfront, might operate at suboptimal capacity, but will operate better when conditions change. The question is, as mining gets into increasingly complex geology and economics, should we continue to chase maximum capacity, or should flexibility be prioritized in fixed plant design?

