In memory of Walter Curlook (1929 – 2014) Inducted in Canadian Mining Hall of Fame in 1997

http://mininghalloffame.ca/

Walter Curlock passed away on October 3, 2014. The following two profiles are from the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame and Sudbury Living Magazine.

Walter Curlook is a man of vision who helped shape the world’s largest nickel producer. Throughout his lengthy career with Inco, he has been responsible for fostering new technologies and products, new working environments and a new era of government and public relations. Aptly described as “an industrial Renaissance man of the 20th century,” he has achieved distinction in mining, metallurgy, environmental protection, and research and development.

Born in 1929 in Coniston, Ontario, Curlook, at age 15, began part time work at Inco’s metallurgical plants in Sudbury. After graduating from Sudbury High School, he earned an undergraduate degree in science from the University of Toronto, followed by a graduate degree and his Ph.D.

At 25, Curlook joined Inco as a research metallurgist in Copper Cliff. With a keen interest in research and an understanding of the benefits of innovation, he earned rapid advancement. In 1989, he was elected a director of Inco and, in 1990, became President Commissioner of PT International Nickel Indonesia. He remains active, even in retirement, and is currently President of Goro Nickel, an Inco joint venture in the South Pacific.

Curlook’s technical achievements reflect his knack for converting theories and good ideas into practical applications. He has been granted 12 process patents and has two more pending. In his first significant project, which he saw through from concept to application, Curlook was director of the pilot plant designed to develop a process to roast pelletized nickel sulphide to a granular oxide sinter of less than 0.5% sulphur. He contributed to the construction of Inco’s fluid bed roasting plant, a breakthrough which improved the feed for Inco’s refineries. This, in turn, led to the spinoff of other related improvements and new applications in the science of fluid bed roasting.

Curlook’s second major area of advancement in metallurgical sciences involved improvements to the carbonyl process. His refinements enhanced a low energy consuming nickel process which turns out no polluting waste an example of the environmental sustainability of 20th century mineral production.

Curlook was a leader in research and development, creating research divisions at Thompson, Manitoba, and in Sudbury. Bulk mining methods such as vertical crater retreat mining, which doubled productivity, were pioneered under his guidance. In 1982, he established Inco’s Copper Cliff North mine as a research mine. Here, great advances were made in automation and the adaptation of computer and laser technology. He helped create Continuous Mining Systems (CMS), which built innovative mining equipment to improve Inco’s productivity. CMS, now an independent firm, has more than 250 employees and annual sales of $50 million.

Throughout his career, Curlook pursued with vigor the inseparability of productivity and safety. But what may be his finest achievement was the overall direction he provided for Inco’s sulphur dioxide abatement program at Sudbury. This $600 million program, completed in 1993, has been described as the largest environmental project ever completed by the mining industry.

An industry leader, Curlook has been honored many times by his peers. Named a Member of the Order of Canada in 1996, he has come to personify what a modern mining company could and should be.

Click here for the original source of this material: http://mininghalloffame.ca/inductees/a-c/walter_curlook

 

Walter Curlook (Sudbury Living Magazine – April 14, 2013)

http://www.sudburylivingmagazine.com/

Walter Curlook helped shape the world‘s largest nickel producer. Throughout his lengthy career with Inco, he was responsible for fostering new technologies and products, new working environments, and a new era of government and public relations.

He achieved distinction in mining, metallurgy, environmental protection, and research and development. He was also a community leader. Born in 1929 in Coniston, Curlook, at age 15, began part-time work at Inco’s metallurgical plant in Sudbury. After graduating from Sudbury High School, he earned an undergraduate degree in science from the University of Toronto, followed by a graduate degree and his Ph.D.

At 25, Curlook joined Inco as a research metallurgist in Copper Cliff. In 1989, he was elected a director of Inco and, in 1990, became president commissioner of PT International Nickel Indonesia.

Curlook was a leader in research and development. creating research divisions at Thompson, Man., and in Sudbury. He holds 12 patents that relate to the smelting and refining of copper-nickel ores, including a method for roasting sulphides and the removal of impurities from nickel oxide granules.

Throughout his career, Curlook pursued with vigor the inseparability of productivity and safety. His finest achievement may be the overall direction he provided for Inco’s sulphur dioxide abatement program in Sudbury. This $600-million program, completed in 1993, has been described as the largest environmental project ever completed by the mining industry.

He was named a Member of the Order of Canada in 1996. As the first chair of the board of Cambrian College, he played a large role in establishing the Sudbury campus as a centre for mining and engineering technology. He also helped establish a mining engineering program at Laurentian University.

Click here for the original source of this material: http://www.sudburylivingmagazine.com/2013/04/14/whos-who-walter-curlook.html