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South Africa's drilling provider across five continents, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed Master Drilling, is well positioned to benefit from the commodity bull run, the shift in the market, and the global transitioning of opencast mining to underground mining in the short, medium, and long term, says Danie Pretorius, the founder and CEO of the 40-year-old original-equipment manufacturer, which has expanded beyond its initial raise boring specialisation to include comprehensive drilling services.
"If you look at our pipeline order book, it's the highest it's been... so, I guess today it's a matter of execution," an upbeat Pretorius commented in an interview with Mining Weekly. (See attached Creamer Media video.)
Master Drilling's 2026 pipeline order book is at the $1-billion level amid the company's record 2025 revenue of $292-million and 71.3% higher earnings per share.
"If you take a step back and look at miners, they're desperate for ways to access orebodies and service providers like ourselves need to try to develop those technologies, those systems, to help these miners to get down there ... and there's a lot of opportunity," Pretorius pointed out on March 31, the day it reported a 57.2% higher operating profit of $46.5-million.
Interestingly, Master Drilling is currently advancing what will be the largest and longest raise-bore hole ever drilled in the world. This is being done at Northam Platinum's Zonderiende platinum group metals (PGMs) mine in South Africa's Limpopo province.
Backing up the dominant 83% raise boring business pillar of the multi-pillared Master Drilling are digitalisation and smart mining at 11%, slim drilling at 4%, and mechanical rock excavation and cutting at 2%.
As mines deepen and become more complex, the autonomous technology that Master Drilling is taking steps to provide is expected to become a future differentiator.
Of the next-generation machines, the blind hole machine has been mobilised to Chile and during the last year, AI has been used for predictive maintenance, fault finding and drill parameter optimisation while drilling is taking place.
When Mining Weekly last spoke to Master Drilling, three major developments that have the potential to move the needle for mining, were highlighted. One of them was what you described as your "ready-made new shaft boring system, or SBS" that points to drilling a shaft to depth in half the time. Has that succeeded in moving the needle yet?
We've completed phase one. We've actually commissioned the machine outside of our works on a farm, and we've hit most of those key performance indicators (KPIs). We're now moving into phase two. Most of the plan is being ordered, and we hope in the second half of the year to receive the hardware and to commission the second phase of this equipment late this year, early 2027. So, we hope to have this machine deployed on a project somewhere in 2027 if we hit all the KPIs in the next phase. But certainly exciting stuff, and a nice tool to have in the box for the miners to get quicker access to their orebodies.
The second potential needle-mover mentioned was a mobile tunnel borer, or MTB, machine that was described as paving the way for the third needle-mover – a narrow-reef rock cutter that was expected to maximise extraction and minimise waste from an orebody that was currently not economically viable using conventional mining methods. How's the MTB going?
We commissioned the machine the end of last year at the Bokoni site. We're doing the project in collaboration with African Rainbow Minerals (ARM), and it's early days. We're ramping up production as we speak, but, again, once we can get this fully operational, we expect a lot of interest from the industry to use the MTB-type tun...