With its close proximity to the central business district of Gaborone, PPC’s Kgale quarry is riding the wave of construction activity in Botswana’s capital, which is premised on the country’s sustained, and now accelerated, modernisation drive. Munesu Shoko reports.
On the back of greater political stability, good governance and prudent economic and natural resource management, Botswana’s sustained economic growth, averaging 5% per annum over the past decade, according to the World Bank, has been among the fastest globally. Having been one of the poorest countries in Africa for many years, robust economic growth, supported by its diamond-based wealth, has lifted Botswana to become an upper-middle income country.
While the heavy reliance on commodities has previously rendered the country vulnerable to international market fluctuations, it has also acted as a wakeup call for the government which has now realised that it cannot rely on diamonds forever. The Botswana government has since introduced an economic stimulus programme to capacitate its economic diversification agenda. This initiative is ensuring that the economy is firing on all cylinders, with construction, all the way from road infrastructure to new property developments, being considered a key economic enabler.
On the back of this modernisation drive, Botswana is building more sophisticated highways, complemented by shopping malls that are leaping out of former dumpsites and swathes of bush. Gaborone, the capital, is expanding as far as the nearby town of Mogoditshane, and has even reached the boundaries of neighbouring Tlokweng. The country’s economy is thus expected to grow by an estimated 4.2% in 2017 compared with the 2.9% growth in 2016.
Amid such a hive of construction activity, PPC Aggregates, one of the largest providers of materials and solutions in Africa, is seeing increased demand for aggregates at its Kgale quarry, strategically located some 3km from Gaborone city centre. PPC Aggregates Botswana is the biggest aggregates producer in Botswana. As part of its African expansion programme, the South African-headquartered company acquired three more aggregate quarries from Quarries of Botswana way back in 2011, to add to its existing Kgale quarry. The US$6.8 million acquisition for new quarries in Gaborone, Francistown and Selebi-Phikwe, was driven by the company’s foresight that both Gaborone and Francistown were going to be significant growth drivers in Botswana.
Rightly so, construction activity abounds in Gaborone, and PPC’s Kgale quarry has expanded its existing plant to be able to cope with the increasing demand of its aggregates. Aggregates Business International recently visited the quarry, which supplies an extensive range of granite products to the civil construction industry, including large construction concerns, as well as readymix concrete producers, brick manufacturers and road construction projects.
Its grey granite product range includes 19mm for road stone and concrete production; 13.2 mm; 9.5mm; 6.7mm; as well as crusher dust. According to Patrick Lesola, works manager, PPC Aggregates Botswana, the quarry faces a “nice problem to have” of increased demand, which at some point, exceeds the available supply capacity of 600,000tonnes/year. The setback has since been plugged by establishing Plant 2 on site, which produces about 100tonnes/hour, and has the same structure as the main plant.
To meet the increased demand, the quarry also works on a 24/5 basis from Monday to Friday, working three shifts a day. In terms of operational processes, several of the activities at Kgale are subcontracted. Drilling and blasting has been outsourced to contractor, Nowata Africa. Nowata Africa has since subcontracted the drilling function to Danoher Contracting, which has an Atlas Copco T45 drill rig working on site.
Lesola reasons that outsourcing these processes leads to a combination of downsizing the company’s fixed costs and reducing capital investments. However, he is of the view that when you outsource several processes of your operation, contractor management becomes extremely crucial.
For example, quarry management doesn’t stipulate frequency of the drill and blast processes, but the contractor has been tasked with providing an average of 65,000tonnes of rock-on-ground every month. Frequency of blasts is dictated by available demand. “We buy capacity from them,” says Lesola.
After the blasts, material is hauled from the pit to the primary crusher using three Bell articulated haulers. The load and haul function has also been outsourced to a contractor, SA Earthworks. Lesola places a premium on sizing the excavator to maximise production with each truck load. The general rule of thumb is typically four to six passes or under 90-second loading. The goal is to maximise the total cycle times.
The fewer passes that are made result in shorter cycle times, which in turn increase production, while reducing diesel burn, which is about 25,000 litres per month, contributed mostly by the combustion of explosives on site. With that in mind, a 50 tonne Hyundai 500LC-7 excavator has been deployed to load the three 30 t Bell B30D dumpers hauling material from the pit to the primary crusher. With its 50 tonne capacity, the excavator can load the haulers cost-effectively, achieving three to four passes per load. This, together with a primary crusher that is located close to the pit (maximum hauling distance of 300 m), ensures that cycle times are kept to a maximum of six minutes, increasing production and maximising fuel economy in the process.
Haulers tip directly into the primary crusher, a Telsmith 3042 jaw crusher. From here, material is fed into the secondary crusher, a Telsmith 2536 jaw, via two vibrating feeders. Fines are screened from the 2536 jaw before oversized material is sent to a tertiary crusher, a 4 ¼ Osborn standard cone crusher which produces the 19 mm road stone. Anything below that is sent to a vertical shaft impactor (VSI) crusher, a Pilot 208, which Lesola says is an operator-friendly machine. From the VSI, all material under the size of 19 mm is then separated into the different final product sizes using three 6x16 Osborn triple deck screens and a 4x12 Osborn double deck screen.