Abstract

ABSTRACT Open-pit slope engineering involves balancing economic imperatives and risk, where an optimum pit slope design seeks to safely steepen the pit slope angles to minimize the mining of waste, therefore maximizing ore recovery. Open-pit Design Acceptance Criteria (DAC) had been proposed and adopted by industry, and the Guidelines for Open Pit Slope Design, published in 2009, finally provided a consistent set of guidelines. Since the publication of these guidelines, it has been the industry experience that practical DAC requires consideration of multiple levels of design confidence, ranging from highly uncertain greenfield sites to mature operations; the unique nature of consequences associated with open pit wall failures as opposed to other civil and mining structures; and differences between operators’ risk appetite. This article presents the state of practice for inter-ramp and overall open-pit slope design in the mining industry and develops flexible DAC for operating pits that addresses the considerations outlined. The criteria are rooted in robust risk tolerance principles, previously adopted criteria, a database of open-pit designs, and mathematical validation for criteria in terms of both Factor of Safety (FoS) and Probability of Failure (PoF).

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