Info Image

Nokia, Vivo to Provide Private LTE Netwok to a Mining Industry 4.0 Project in Brazil

Nokia, Vivo to Provide Private LTE Netwok to a Mining Industry 4.0 Project in Brazil Image Credit: Daniel Krason/Bigstockphoto.com

Nokia on Monday announced it has partnered with Vivo to provide private wireless services for Vale’s Carajás mine in Brazil. 

The service will be part of an Industry 4.0 project by Vale to deploy autonomous drill platforms and trucks. The project will increase productivity at the mine and improve worker safety. The network will be also used for mine-wide communications between workers. Vale plans to expand the technology to other mines currently using older WiMax solutions.

 

Nokia is currently working with several mining operators worldwide to deploy private wireless networks based on LTE, with plans to migrate to 5G in the future. Autonomous ore trucks have been shown to increase productivity by 15% and reduce fuel and maintenance costs by 10%. Nokia’s LTE and 5G, being mobile technologies, provide more reliable support than WiMax or Wi-Fi for operating and controlling trucks and drills on the move. Nokia’s private industrial-grade wireless solutions are enabling many new applications in the mining field, including support for environmental monitoring, video-assisted remote operations and improved worker monitoring and safety. Nokia is partnering with key solution providers in the mining industry, including Komatsu and Sandvik.

Vale is also currently operating 13 autonomous trucks on a WiMax network at its Brucutu mine in Minas Gerais, Brazil, with the intention to also replace it with a private LTE network for improved performance and reliability. 

Gustavo Vieira, CIO of Vale
This new generation of wireless technology — LTE and, eventually, 5G — is enabling us to explore many new applications and use cases for remote and autonomous operations. This will help to make our mining operations more efficient, sustainable and safe for our workers.

Alex Salgado, Vivo’s B2B Vice-President
The private wireless service we are implementing at Vale’s Carajás mine is one of many deployments that we expect to see in the next few years. 

NEW REPORT:
Next-Gen DPI for ZTNA: Advanced Traffic Detection for Real-Time Identity and Context Awareness
Author

Ray is a news editor at The Fast Mode, bringing with him more than 10 years of experience in the wireless industry.

For tips and feedback, email Ray at ray.sharma(at)thefastmode.com, or reach him on LinkedIn @raysharma10, Facebook @1RaySharma

PREVIOUS POST

Epsilon Partners with NAPAfrica to Deliver Peering at the Largest IX on the African Continent

NEXT POST

Nokia, U.S. Cellular Team Up to Add 5G mmWave Capabilities