
Monday Jun 01, 2026
Why Remote Mining Sites Need to Retire Reactive Maintenance: Rosslyn Hill
Remote mining sites can't run on reactive maintenance.
Restocking harsh chemicals across fly-in fly-out rosters isn't a system — it's a liability. There's a better approach.
Here's a story that proves it.
Rosslyn Hill Mining operates a lead mine 900km north-west of Perth. Their village kitchen had a grease trap problem — foul odours, right next to a dining hall feeding 170 people three times a day. And out there, every pump-out means mobilisation fees, freight, and a long wait.
They switched the grease trap to FOGZAP — a probiotic treatment where bacteria digest fats, oils and grease continuously, between site visits.
Then something useful happened by accident.
During a staff changeover, the weekly dosing stopped. The odours came straight back. Dosing resumed → odours gone again.
That's not a testimonial. That's an unplanned A/B test. It proves the biology was doing the work — not masking a smell.
The lesson for anyone running infrastructure far from the nearest contractor: stop buying callouts. Buy systems that manage themselves.
Learn more:
https://thrivebio.com.au/
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