TAIE Walk-Away Doctrine
A Q&A on Capital Refusal
Internal Terms
STM — Stress Transition Mesh
SPSM — Structural–Process System Model
DPSM — Depth–Phase System Model
UESM alignment — Universal Earth System Model coherence
Question to TAIE:
Estimate the percentage of mining projects currently underway in which TAIE would urge withdrawal due to weak fundamentals.
Answer (TAIE View)
This is a hard question — and the right one.
TAIE would likely urge withdrawal from approximately 50–65% of currently active mining projects, spanning exploration through development. The percentage is lower for established Tier-1 producers.
That number sounds aggressive until you examine what TAIE screens for — and what most projects are optimized to pass.
What TAIE Is Not Asking
TAIE is not asking:
Is there mineralization?
Can capital be raised?
Can something be mined for a while?
Those questions explain activity. They do not govern survivability.
What TAIE Is Asking
TAIE asks:
Is this a coherent, vertically evolving system?
Does it have a survivable access future beyond pits and surface-era assumptions?
Do fundamentals improve with depth and time, or do they decay?
Are failure modes already visible at the system level?
Most projects were never designed to answer these questions.
Breakdown by Project Class (Approximate)
🟢 Tier-1, Long-Life Producers
~10–15% urged to withdraw
Many score UESM ≥ 4
Strong STM and DPSM already proven
TAIE typically redirects strategy, not capital
Examples include Carlin-style complexes, deep porphyries, and long-lived underground districts.
TAIE optimizes here; it does not abandon.
🟡 Tier-2 / Mid-Tier Producers & Late Developers
~35–45% urged to withdraw or radically restructure
Common failure signals:
DPSM blindness — depth makes the system worse
SPSM fragility — metallurgy or blending issues waiting to surface
Pit-dependent economics with no post-pit access strategy
Shallow systems marketed as long-life assets
TAIE response:
Exit unless access and regime strategy changes, or
Downgrade to finite cash-flow harvest (not growth capital)
🔴 Explorers & “Discovery Stories”
~70–80% urged to withdraw
This is where the culling is most severe.
Why:
Many discoveries are high SPSM, low DPSM
Systems are often finite epithermal or shallow oxide expressions
Capital is raised before system behavior is proven
Vertical evolution is assumed, not demonstrated
TAIE’s stance here is blunt but disciplined:
If depth does not improve the system, walk away early.
Why TAIE Is Comfortable Saying “Walk Away”
Because capital is finite — and opportunities are not.
TAIE is not anti-mining.
It is anti-capital entrapment.
Walking away early:
preserves capital
preserves credibility
preserves optionality
avoids reputational damage from late-stage failure
The Core Insight
TAIE does not kill projects.
It kills false futures.
Most mining projects do not fail because the ore is absent.
They fail because:
the next depth regime is worse
the access model breaks
the system stops evolving
or society refuses the footprint
TAIE simply sees those outcomes earlier.
Why This Is Not “Too Conservative”
Counterintuitively, TAIE’s refusal discipline:
concentrates capital into fewer, stronger systems
increases risk-adjusted returns
enables deeper commitment to true winners
This is how you get:
fewer projects
larger outcomes
longer mine lives
less noise
The Governing Rule
If TAIE cannot see how a system improves with depth and time, it assumes the opposite — and exits.
That rule alone explains the percentage.
Why This Matters
Mining capital does not fail because geology is unknowable.
It fails because refusal comes too late.
TAIE exists to make refusal early, rational, and repeatable.