Audio By Carbonatix
Gold Fields Ghana has acquired a new “state-of-the-art” instrumentation training rig to train its engineers and young people from communities surrounding the company’s Tarkwa and Damang mines in the Western Region.
The rig, built by Endress and Hauser and supplied through its local partner, Automation Group Ghana, is “one of its kind in Ghana and Africa”.
At the commissioning of the rig at the Tarkwa mine, Joshua Mortoti, Executive Vice President and Head of Gold Fields West Africa, said the rig will “offer intensive and practical training as it simulates real-world conditions in the process plant in a safe classroom environment.

Joshua Mortoti, EVP and Head of Gold Fields West Africa; Kweku Asmah, CEO of The Automation Ghana Group and the Gold Fields team
“Our instrumentation engineers will be equipped with the technical know-how, which will enhance their competence.”
Mr Mortoti noted that the rig, which costs over €450,000, will also be used to train community youth when the “Gold Fields Training School launches the instrumentation apprenticeship programme for young people in the host communities”.
According to him, the company is committed to the skills development of its workforce.
“Since 2014, we have invested close to $17 million in various competency-enhancement, leadership and professional development programmes for our employees and business partners.
Some of these training programmes cater to the specific needs of employees so that they can develop their individual potential.”
“Engineering masterpiece”
According to Ing. Kweku Asmah, CEO of The Automation Group Ghana, the rig features state-of-the-art technology, enabling comprehensive training in process instrumentation and automation.
“The training rig has been designed to simulate all control systems used in a typical mining process, such as froth flotation and thickening processes, providing the best possible practical training experience, with a specific focus on pressure, flow and level metering systems.”

Mr Asmah added that the holistic learning environment “fosters innovation and ingenuity” as it integrates “Endress and Hauser's precision instrumentation and Festo Didactic's training expertise in automation”.
Mr Simon Egloff, Business Development Manager for Switzerland-based Endress and Hauser, described the instrumentation rig as an engineering masterpiece.
“The possibilities which this powerful tool offers make the Gold Fields’ Tarkwa Mine unique in Ghana and the entire West Africa. Smart sensors using heartbeat technology as a solid base for the Internet of things will help to move from reactive maintenance to preventive maintenance.”
He expressed optimism that once trainees become familiar with the latest technology embedded in the training rig, they will be capable of extending “improvements into the field” and achieve higher productivity.
Latest Stories
-
GNFS rescues seven trapped in crash at Peki-Tsiame
2 minutes -
GNFS rescues trapped driver after cargo truck overturns at Fante New Town
8 minutes -
Photos from JoyNews National Dialogue on youth and climate change
23 minutes -
Woman accused of threatening President Mahama granted GH¢1 million bail
31 minutes -
One dead, 4 injured in articulated truck collision at Assin Nsuta
40 minutes -
To Nationalise or Transform? Joy Business Hosts Roundtable on Ghana’s Extractive Future
44 minutes -
NACOC partners UPSA-RCC to train enumerators for baseline study on substance use among youth
50 minutes -
Kay Codjoe Writes: The dangerous romance between inciteful extremism and “free speech”
60 minutes -
From Ghana to Canada: The rising influence of Ghanaian scholars opening global doors for students
1 hour -
Gender Ministry backs Black Maidens ahead of crucial World Cup qualifiers
1 hour -
Many are called, but hostel fees have chosen few
1 hour -
8 suspects arrested in killing of queen mother at Atebubu
1 hour -
Raúl Castro indictment threatens to ignite war between US and Cuba
2 hours -
2026 Africa Bitcoin Day marked in Accra
2 hours -
US sanctions Tanzanian police official over alleged torture of human rights activists
2 hours