Semantic Scholar Open Access 2026

Why Most Mining Discoveries Fail after Exploration – And How Professionals Can See it Coming Early

Mahesh Raheja

Abstrak

Many mineral discoveries fail to transition into operating mines despite reporting strong early exploration results. While these failures are often attributed to market conditions, permitting delays, or financing constraints, the underlying causes are frequently visible much earlier-during the interpretation of exploration data itself. This article examines why exploration success is routinely mistaken for mining viability and how grades, when viewed in isolation, create false confidence. It argues that geometry, continuity, structural coherence, and data density are far more decisive determinants of long-term success. Drawing on recurring industry patterns across base and precious metal projects, the article also explores how selective disclosure and behavioural bias shape market perception and internal decision-making. Finally, it identifies early warning signals that experienced professionals can recognise and outlines how boards, investors, and managers can improve capital discipline by detecting failure risk before projects advance into costly development stages.

Penulis (1)

M

Mahesh Raheja

Format Sitasi

Raheja, M. (2026). Why Most Mining Discoveries Fail after Exploration – And How Professionals Can See it Coming Early. https://doi.org/10.18311/2meoga/2026/54421

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2026
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
Semantic Scholar
DOI
10.18311/2meoga/2026/54421
Akses
Open Access ✓