Executive Summary
Mining operations have made significant investments in Computerised Maintenance Management Systems — yet fleet availability challenges persist across many operations. The root cause is a category error: organisations treat a data-recording tool as a reliability-management system. This blog examines the five things a CMMS cannot do, why that gap can cost tens of millions annually in large operations — and what a genuine, and what a genuine reliability system looks like in contrast.
The Investment That Does Not Improve Reliability
Over the last decade, the CMMS market grew from USD 0.8 billion to over USD 3.2 billion globally. Major CMMS and EAM platforms have been implemented in virtually every serious mining operation. And yet, in the 40+ fleet audits Structured reliability assessments have identified across four continents, average fleet mechanical availability at the time of first engagement is 74–78% — against an industry target of 88%.
The correlation is uncomfortable: the more sophisticated the CMMS, the more confident the organisation is that it has a reliability system. That confidence is, in most cases, misplaced.
A CMMS records what happened after the fact. A reliability system prevents what is about to happen. Conflating the two is among the most expensive category errors in asset-intensive industry management.
What a CMMS Actually Does — and Does Not Do
To be clear: a well-implemented CMMS is valuable. It creates the data that a reliability system needs. But it does not, by itself, constitute a reliability management capability. The distinction matters because most organisations believe their CMMS investment has solved the problem it was intended to solve.
Five Things Your CMMS Cannot Do
1 — Identify Why a Failure Recurred
A CMMS records that EX-03 hydraulic pump failed on 14 March, 8 April, and 2 June. It cannot tell you that the root cause across all three events was hydraulic contamination from a missing desiccant breather cap — first removed during a service in February and not reinstated. That connection requires a reliability engineer applying structured root cause analysis to the data the CMMS produced.
2 — Evaluate Whether a PM Task Is Effective
A CMMS can tell you whether the 500-hour engine service was completed on schedule. It cannot tell you whether that service interval is correctly calibrated to the failure mode it is designed to prevent — or whether the task itself is targeting the right failure mechanism. Most PM libraries in mining are OEM-default lists, never validated against actual failure data.
3 — Connect Downtime to Financial Exposure
A CMMS records downtime hours. It rarely converts those hours to production value lost, maintenance cost premium from reactive work, or lifecycle value erosion. The CFO and Mine Director are making capital decisions based on budget lines — not on the financial consequence of reliability failure. Those numbers live outside the CMMS.
4 — Predict Failure Before It Occurs
Oil analysis results that show Si rising from 12 ppm to 28 ppm over three consecutive samples contain a clear signal: dust contamination is entering the hydraulic system and engine failure is developing. A CMMS does not interpret this signal. Without a CBM programme with threshold-to-WO workflow, the sample result gets filed and the engine fails six weeks later.
5 — Enforce Execution Quality
A CMMS can show that a work order was closed. It cannot confirm that the repair was executed correctly, that post-repair verification occurred, or that the failure mode was correctly documented. WO closure compliance in most mining operations sits between 54–68% for full field completion — making the historical record systematically incomplete.
The Financial Consequence of the Confusion
When an organisation believes its CMMS is a reliability system, it stops looking for the reliability capability it does not have. The consequences are quantifiable:
In a 50-unit mining fleet, these metrics translate to an annual reliability-related financial exposure of $28–60 million — of which 60–65% is preventable through structured reliability governance. The CMMS will record every failure event in that exposure. It will not prevent a single one.
What a Reliability System Actually Looks Like
A reliability management system has five components that a CMMS supports but does not constitute:
| Capability | Without Reliability System | With Reliability System |
|---|---|---|
| Failure Mode Analysis | Absent — failures repaired, not investigated | Active — FMEA + 5-Why RCA on all recurring modes |
| Strategy Design | OEM Default — intervals not validated by failure data | RCM-Based — data-driven intervals, CBM tasks linked to failure modes |
| Condition Monitoring | Absent — oil analysis not acted on | Active — alert-to-WO workflow, detection rate >50% |
| Financial Intelligence | Absent — downtime not converted to financial exposure | Active — CREM built monthly, presented to board |
| Governance Cadence | Absent — no monthly executive review of reliability KPIs | Active — monthly exec review, quarterly board summary |
The Operational Relevance
For Maintenance Managers: the next time your CMMS shows a recurring failure mode on the same component for the third time in 12 months, ask this question — where in our system is the person whose job it is to make sure this never happens a fourth time? If the answer is "there isn't one," your CMMS is performing its function correctly. Your reliability system is absent.
For Mine Directors and CFOs: the question is not "do we have a CMMS?" The question is "do we have a reliability engineer, a structured RCA process, a condition monitoring programme with a threshold-to-WO workflow, and a monthly governance review that connects these to financial performance?" If any of those four elements is absent, the CMMS investment is recording a problem that the organisation has not yet mobilised to solve.
Leadership Takeaway
A CMMS is the foundation of a reliability system — not the system itself. The distinction determines whether an organisation spends its maintenance budget recording failure or preventing it. Most operations, today, are spending it on the former while believing they are doing the latter.
Ready to close the gap between data collection and reliability governance? MitWin's Fleet Stability & Cost Risk Audit identifies the financial exposure in your operation — in 15 working days.
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