Rio Tinto (RIO.AX)
is set to use driverless iron ore trains in Western Australia in 2018,
the world No.2 miner of the steelmaking commodity said on Monday after
completing its first long-haul journey with a completely autonomous
locomotive.
The 100-km (60 mile) run marked a
key step towards full commissioning next year of the company’s AutoHaul
program, originally slated to start in 2015.
“This
successful pilot run puts us firmly on track to meet our goal of
operating the world’s first fully-autonomous, heavy-haul, long-distance
rail network,” Rio Tinto iron ore chief Chris Salisbury said in a
statement.
Rio Tinto has long hailed the
potential benefits of a driverless rail network, including speeding up
journeys from mine to port and back, cutting out time needed for
drivers’ shift handovers and eliminating issues with driver fatigue.
It
already runs driverless trucks at its mines, a major contributor to the
company’s sharp cut in unit costs over the past five years.
Delays
with the AutoHaul rail plan cut Rio Tinto’s iron ore output in 2016 to
330 million tonnes from an original target of 350 million tonnes.
The company runs about 200 locomotives on more than 1,700 km of track, hauling ore from 16 mines to four port terminals.

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