Glen Nwaila is the Director of the Wits Mining Institute and Adjunct Professor at the School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand (Wits). Prior to joining Wits, he worked in the mining and consulting industries for 12 years, where he led teams of mining professionals and led audits in the mineral resources and extractive metallurgy plants. At Sibanye Stillwater, Glen led the geology functions in the Driefontein operations. He also served as Manager at Deloitte Technical Mining Advisory. Glen is an Erasmus Mundus Scholar at Uppsala University since 2018. Nwaila completed his Ph.D. with Magna Cum Laude at the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg in Germany, M.Sc. degree in Chemical Engineering (with merit) from the University of Cape Town and an Honours degree in Geology from the University of Johannesburg. He currently serves as one of the 35 IGC Legacy Fund's Board of Directors. He is a Professional Natural Scientist with the South African Council for Natural Scientific Professions (SACNASP) and is a Fellow of the Geological Society of South Africa (FGSSA). Glen’s research focuses on improving ore characterization and modelling to enhance selective mineral resource extraction, minimize environmental impacts, increase profitability, and maximize natural resource utilization. Specifically, Glen and his students work on geometallurgy, machine learning, and spatial data analytics research projects related to multiscale and multivariate data integration, big remote sensing, and geochemical data analysis to enable optimal decision-making in the presence of uncertainty.
- ‘Nose-to-tail' commodity and by-product research
- Circular economies and commodity demand
- The commodity value-chain linking the block-chain and vertical integration of commodities through research
Wednesday 08 February 10:50 - 11:40 Expo Stage
Green Metals day
Leading mining engineers and experts unpack the new innovations and technology that are revolutionizing mining. With technology able to improve productivity, safety, and greener production, through to advances in mine rehabilitation and prospecting, a host of innovations are rapidly changing the industry. To transform their operations, mines are embracing mechanisation, digitization, and automation along with the sophisticated analytics that support them. But company ambitions are constrained by insufficient skills in the workforce and find themselves underequipped for the pace of technological change.
Thursday 09 February 12:00 - 12:35 Main Stage
Young Leaders Programme