Buryatia Students Learn to Build Mining Robots as Rosatom Launches Classroom
The initiative aims to teach school students programming and robotics skills tailored to the mining industry.

At a school in the village of Romanovka in Russia’s Republic of Buryatia, the mining division of Rosatom has launched the region’s first educational robotics initiative, Gornyy kod (Mining Code).
Students will learn programming and assemble robotic replicas of real mining equipment. The program has been equipped with 10 modern kits, including high-performance laptops, specialized software, and robotics components, Rosatom said.
Humans Still Run the Machines
The centerpiece of the student kit is a load-haul-dump machine—a robotic replica of real underground mining equipment. Students are expected not only to assemble the model but also to program it to move, maneuver, and execute commands.
This is the second robotics classroom launched in a region where Rosatom’s mining division operates. Last year, a pilot class opened in the settlement of Revda in Russia’s Murmansk region. Over the next few years, the division plans to deploy 250 robotic systems in its operations. Khiagda, Russia’s leading uranium producer, is already actively working in this direction.
Training Future Professionals
Rosatom’s mining division is one of the world’s largest producers of natural uranium and the leading uranium producer in Russia.
Earlier, we reported that a Tsifrovoy sovetchik (Digital Advisor) system has been deployed at the Donskoy Mining and Processing Plant.








































