Rob’s day starts early. “I get up at 4:30 and do some exercise.” If you sit at the wheel for hours at a time concentrating hard, you need something to balance it out. “I like going swimming with friends” – but his favourite activity is stand-up paddle boarding. “I paddle through the water like a maniac on the board.” After training it’s time for work, at the wheel of a road train worth over a million dollars.
An important delivery
Today, he’s heading to Marble Bar, around 200 km inland. The diesel in Rob’s tanks is the elixir of life for the mine there. “Without our supply trips, the generators would give up the ghost, the canteens would have no food, the machines wouldn’t be able to run.”
Marble Bar is one of the hottest places in the world, with temperatures regularly exceeding 40 degrees. It is an inhospitable environment and a real challenge for people and machines. “If the temperatures reach 35 degrees, we get sandstorms. They look fantastic from a distance, but if you have to drive through one you’ll notice straight away that the sand settles on everything,” explains Rob. And the ever-present iron ore dust around the mines compounds the situation.