Primepoly Co., Ltd.

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HDPE Pipe Applications: Mining, Irrigation & Aquaculture Case Studies

Real HDPE pipe project cases from mining slurry transport in Ghana, drip / center-pivot irrigation in Saudi Arabia, and marine aquaculture fish cages in Norway.

Primepoly Engineering Team

Primepoly Engineering Team

Primepoly Engineering Team

Published: Mar 5, 2026

12 min read

HDPE Pipe Applications: Mining, Irrigation & Aquaculture Case Studies

HDPE's market dominance in municipal water is well documented. Less visible — but commercially even more important — are the three industrial sectors where HDPE replaced steel a generation ago and never gave the territory back: mining, irrigation and aquaculture. Each puts a different stress on the pipe (abrasion, UV, salt water, ground movement), and each has a Primepoly playbook for product selection. This article draws from three current Primepoly projects to show how the engineering plays out.

Mining: slurry, tailings & dewatering

In a copper concentrator, a slurry main moves 30–60% solids by weight at 2–4 m/s for 24 hours a day. Steel pipes wear out in 2–4 years from internal abrasion. HDPE PE100 lasts 10–15× longer because the soft, ductile polymer absorbs particle impacts rather than being eroded by them. PE100RC (resistance-to-cracking grade) extends life further by resisting slow-crack growth in scratched or notched conditions. Sizes typically run DN160 – DN800 mm in SDR11 (PN16) for the higher-pressure first-stage lines, dropping to SDR17 (PN10) for tailings deposition.

Co-extruded white-outer / black-inner HDPE is the Primepoly product of choice for above-ground mine lines. The white outer reflects up to 40% more heat than solid black, keeping the pipe wall 8–15 °C cooler in tropical sites — that translates to a 5–10% longer pressure life. The black inner is carbon-black for full UV blocking from inside, which matters when the line is partially empty between shifts. Joints are butt-fused on-site with W-series automatic machines; flange transitions to pumps and valves use stub-end + carbon-steel backing rings.

Irrigation: from center-pivot to drip

Irrigation pipelines look forgiving — low pressure, water-only, no abrasion. But the sun, the soil-temperature swing, and the pumping cycles tell a different story. A center-pivot field in Saudi Arabia runs surface-laid HDPE laterals at 30–45 °C ambient with twice-daily pump cycles. UV degradation is the killer: black HDPE with carbon-black UV stabiliser is the only formulation that survives 20+ years in that climate. Blue-stripe identification helps farm crew distinguish irrigation lines from buried utilities.

Drip-irrigation lateral lines are typically DN16-32 mm in SDR9 (PN16) — the small bore + thicker wall combo handles the sharp pressure-drop across emitters. Long-length coils (200 m+) let one truckload supply a 100-hectare field, and the flexibility of HDPE means the laterals can follow centre-pivot arc or contour without elbow fittings every 6 m. Submains are typically DN90 – DN200 in SDR17 / PN10. Dripper-line manufacturing tolerance is the QC priority — bore variation greater than ±0.05 mm causes uneven emitter flow and uneven irrigation.

Aquaculture: deep-sea fish cages

Modern marine fish farming uses HDPE floating cages anchored in 15–60 m of open ocean. The cage's two upper and two lower rings are large-diameter HDPE pipes (DN250 – DN355 mm SDR17–26) that double as buoyancy elements and structural framing. Salt water, UV, surface waves and storm loads all attack the polymer simultaneously. PE100 with marine-grade UV stabilisers + impact modifiers is the formulation; black is the dominant colour for maximum UV protection.

What distinguishes aquaculture pipe from any other application is the bracket / handrail system. Each cage has 24–48 cross-braces that connect the rings; these are smaller-diameter pipes (DN110 – DN160) with custom moulded fittings. Joints must accept fatigue loading from wave action — typical specifications require 10⁵-cycle fatigue testing of the joint design. Primepoly aquaculture-grade PE100 is one of the few products that passes this test for cages deployed in storm-exposed sites like Norway, Chile and southern Australia.

How the three applications compare

Table — How HDPE specifications differ across three applications
PropertyMining slurryIrrigationAquaculture
ResinPE100 / PE100RCPE100 / PE4710PE100 + marine UV
Typical DNDN160 – DN800DN16 – DN200DN110 – DN355
Typical SDRSDR 11 – 17SDR 9 – 21SDR 17 – 26
ColourBlack or co-extruded white-blackBlack w/ blue stripeBlack
JoiningButt fusion + flanged transitionsButt fusion or compressionButt fusion + custom fittings
Service life target10 – 25 years20 – 30 years15 – 25 years

Specification checklist common to all three

  1. Specify the resin grade explicitly. PE100 is the baseline; specify PE100RC for slow-crack-growth-prone environments (mining, rocky burial), and confirm UV stabiliser concentration for above-ground use.
  2. Specify the colour / stripe scheme to match local conventions. Blue or blue-stripe for water; yellow / orange for gas; black for UV exposure; co-extruded white outer for hot tropical sites.
  3. Specify the SDR / PN class with safety margin. See our SDR/PN selection guide for the calculation; mining and pumped irrigation typically need one PN class above the steady-state demand.
  4. Specify the joining method up front in the WPS. Butt fusion for new trunk; electrofusion for tie-ins; flanges only at equipment transitions. Demand ISO 12176 operator certification.
  5. Specify the QA/QC documentation. For mining and gas projects we recommend 100% data-logged joints + 3.1 mill certs on every batch + a witness-test programme on at least 5% of joints.

The takeaway

Mining, irrigation and aquaculture each push HDPE in a different direction — but the underlying material physics are the same. The right resin grade, the right wall thickness, the right colour / UV protection, and certified fusion joints are the four levers that determine whether your pipe lasts 5 years or 50. Primepoly's engineering team has built this playbook from twenty years of project work; we'd rather quote your project once correctly than win it cheap and underperform. Send your application brief and we'll come back with a sized specification + reference projects from comparable sites.

Frequently asked questions

Abrasion in slurry lines is dominated by particle impact, not particle sliding. Steel — being hard but elastic-then-yield — chips and erodes. HDPE — being soft and elastic over a wide strain range — absorbs particle impacts and recovers. Field life ratios of 10× to 15× are common.
Yes, if you use the right colour. Co-extruded white-black or solid black with carbon-black UV stabilisers is rated for above-ground service. Blue or coloured HDPE is fine buried but UV-degrades above ground over 5–10 years. Specify the colour to match the install plan, not the other way round.
Modern open-ocean fish cages are 90–160 m circumference with two upper rings + two lower rings of HDPE pipe DN250 – DN355. Each cage holds 100,000 to 250,000 fish (Atlantic salmon density ~25 kg/m³ wet weight). Smaller research cages and inshore mussel rafts use DN200-class rings.
No. HDPE is a saturated, non-plasticised polymer — there are no phthalate plasticisers to leach. Carbon-black UV stabiliser is inert and stays bound to the polymer matrix. HDPE is approved for FDA / EU food-contact applications, which is a stricter standard than agricultural soil contact.
Field experience varies by particle hardness and concentration. For typical copper / iron / coal slurry at 30–50% solids and 2–4 m/s velocity, expect 10–15 years for SDR11 PE100 lines — vs 2–4 years for steel. PE100RC grade can push the upper end to 20+ years in the right conditions.

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