It does not get far more distant than this. I am in inland Western Australia, at Rio Tinto’s Higher Nammuldi iron ore mine.
It is a few two-hour flight north from Perth in a area referred to as the Pilbara.
No-one lives completely right here. Round 400 staff are on the positioning at anybody time, and they’re flown in, working between 4 and eight days, relying on their shift sample, earlier than flying residence.
Big vehicles the scale of townhouses, able to hauling 300 tonnes, criss-cross red-earth roads in varied sections of this open-pit mine advanced.
For an outsider like me their dimension is intimidating sufficient, however multiplying that feeling is the information that there is no driver on the wheel.
Throughout a tour of the positioning in a normal-sized firm automobile, one of many vehicles comes into view, approaching from a facet highway.
I sigh with reduction because it deftly turns and continues within the path we’ve got simply come. “Did it make you are feeling uncomfortable?,” asks the automobile’s driver Dwane Pallentine, a manufacturing superintendent.
Higher Nammuldi has a fleet of greater than 50 self-driving vehicles that function independently on pre-defined programs, together with a handful that stay manually pushed and work individually in a unique a part of the mine.
Being trialled can be an autonomous water cart affectionately often called Henry, which, together with manually pushed ones, sprays the mine roads to maintain the mud down.
The corporate automobile I’m in is ready to function alongside the autonomous vehicles solely as a result of it has been fitted with high-accuracy GPS, which permits it to be seen inside a digital system.
Earlier than coming into the mine’s gated autonomous zone, we logged onto this technique and a controller verified over the radio that we have been seen.
It has encased our automobile in a digital bubble that the self-driving vehicles “see” and which causes them to handle their proximity by slowing or stopping as needed.
A contact display in our cabin shows all of the staffed and autonomous autos and different tools within the neighborhood, together with “permission traces” that present the instant routes the self-driving vehicles are aspiring to take. Had I appeared on the display as a substitute of fretting I might have seen that truck was going to show.
Along with all autos being fitted with an enormous pink emergency button that may cease the system, the autonomous vehicles have lasers and radars entrance and rear to detect collision dangers.
The sensors additionally detect obstacles. If a big rock fell off the again of a truck, the sensors on the subsequent truck alongside would discover it and the automobile would cease.
Nonetheless, some vehicles appear further delicate – on my tour I see a pair foiled just by tough roads.
Co-ordinating and monitoring these robots is Rio Tinto’s Operations Centre (OC) in Perth, about 1,500km (930 miles) to the south.
It’s the nerve centre for all the corporate’s Pilbara iron ore operations, which span 17 mines in complete, together with the three making up Higher Nammuldi.
Guided from right here by controllers, embody greater than 360 self-driving vehicles throughout all of the websites (about 84% of the whole fleet is automated); a principally autonomous long-distance rail community to move the mined ore to port amenities; and almost 40 autonomous drills. OC workers additionally remotely management plant and port capabilities.
Autonomy isn’t new to Rio’s Pilbara operations: introduction started within the late 2000s.
Neither is it distinctive: Australia has the best variety of autonomous vehicles and different mining tools of any nation, and different mining firms within the Pilbara additionally use the know-how.
However the scale Rio has grown its operations to right here, together with at Higher Nammuldi – which has one of many largest autonomous truck fleets on the earth – offers it international significance.
And it is a international development. In line with GlobalData the variety of self-driving haul vehicles worldwide has roughly quadrupled over the previous 4 years to greater than 2,000, with most made by both Caterpillar or Komatsu.
The most important motive for introducing the know-how has been to enhance the bodily security of the workforce, says Matthew Holcz, the managing director of the corporate’s Pilbara mines.
Mining is a harmful occupation: heavy equipment may be unpredictably operated by individuals who can even turn into fatigued. “The information clearly exhibits that, via automation, we have a considerably safer enterprise,” says Mr Holcz.
It has additionally improved productiveness – to the tune of about 15%, he estimates. Autonomous tools can be utilized extra as a result of there aren’t any gaps because of shift adjustments or breaks. And autonomous vehicles can even go quicker when there’s much less staff-operated tools on the scene.
Such automation doesn’t come low cost. Rio gained’t disclose what it has spent in complete on its Pilbara automation journey up to now, however observers put it at a number of billions of {dollars}.
In the meantime, employment alternatives have developed. The narrative could be one in every of robots taking jobs, however that doesn’t appear the case right here thus far.
Whereas the OC has about one controller for each 25 autonomous vehicles – in keeping with Rio, nobody has misplaced their job due to automation.
As an alternative, there have been redeployments: truck drivers have joined the OC as controllers themselves, been reskilled to function completely different items of kit, akin to excavators, loaders and dozers, or gone to drive handbook vehicles at completely different websites.
On the OC’s giant open plan ground, amid the banks of screens organized in clusters for the completely different mines, I meet Jess Cowie who used be a handbook driller however now directs autonomous ones from the central drill pod. “I nonetheless put holes within the floor…simply with out the mud, the noise and being away from the household,” she says.
Automation is delivering a “step change” by way of security within the mining trade says Robin Burgess-Limerick, a professor on the College of Queensland in Brisbane who research human components in mining. But it surely doesn’t imply there isn’t room for enchancment.
Professor Burgess-Limerick has analysed incidents involving autonomous tools reported to regulators.
As he sees it, the interfaces utilized by workers each within the discipline and in management centres to realize data aren’t optimally designed. There have been conditions the place discipline workers have misplaced consciousness of the state of affairs, which higher display design could have prevented. “The designers of the know-how ought to put a bit extra effort into contemplating folks,” he says.
And there’s additionally a danger that controllers’ workloads may be overwhelming – it’s a busy, excessive stakes job.
Over-trust, the place folks turn into so assured the autonomous tools will cease that they begin placing themselves in danger, can be a difficulty, and he notes effort must be directed into bettering the flexibility of vehicles themselves to detect moisture. There have been incidents the place moist roadways have prompted them to lose traction.
There may be authentic security considerations with autonomous tools, says Shane Roulstone, co-ordinator for the Western Mine Employees Alliance, which represents mining-related staff within the Pilbara.
He factors to a severe incident this Might the place an autonomous prepare slammed into the again of a broken-down prepare, which staff on the entrance finish have been repairing (they evacuated earlier than it hit however have been left shaken).
However Mr Roulstone additionally praises Rio usually for having, over time, developed “some good methods, procedures and insurance policies” round how folks work together with automated autos.
Mr Roulstone expects that in some unspecified time in the future choices for redeployment will reduce and there’ll job losses. “It’s simply the arithmetic of it,” he says.
In the meantime, Rio’s automation journey within the Pilbara continues with extra vehicles, drills and Henry the water cart. It is usually carefully watching work by Komatsu and Caterpillar to develop un-staffed excavators, loaders and dozers.
Late within the afternoon, ready at Higher Nammuldi’s airport for the final flight again to Perth, the announcement comes that it has been cancelled because of a difficulty with the airplane. That’s 150 further individuals who will now must be fed and accommodated. It’s nothing for Rio, however I can’t assist however assume we people are sophisticated in comparison with robots.