Posted on 08/20/2014 7:19:45 AM PDT by Citizen Zed
New rules about to come into force could put an end to recycling discarded car tyres. The changes mean environmental specialists are now racing to find other ways to save thousands of tonnes of scrap rubber from going to waste. One potential deployment for the unused tyres could be water purification, with a technique that is currently being tested in Kitee, Eastern Finland.
Every year, some 50,000 tonnes worth of used car tyres are withdrawn and sent to scrapyards -- where they are in fact put to good use. The rubber in the tyres is almost 100 percent recyclable, finding valuable use as strengthening material for landfill construction.
In the future, however, this will no longer be possible, as restrictions on re-use mean that tyres can only be used in skips until the end of next year, when the last phases of the landfill law are phased in. The law took effect in June 2013, but there is a transition period for some sections of it.
Sanni Pisto, an environmental specialist from Apila Group, says that the crushed rubber develops a surface called biofilm. Nitrogen, phosphorus and other nutrients stick to the film and are eaten away by microbes that proliferate on the tyres surface.
The technique has already been tested in Heinola with the Finnish Tyre Recycling company, and in the autumn trials will continue in a water pipe percolator in Keuruu, Western Finland.
If an idea sounds good, we try to make it happen, one way or another, Pisto says.
I am sure the Mandela family wants all the tires they can buy.
Thermaldepolymerization, TDP.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.