Skip to main content

One Giant Leap for mankind…

This past month of July America and much of the world celebrated the 50th anniversary of man setting foot on the moon. There were speeches, replays of the Saturn V launch and lunar landing videos, interviews with astronauts, and much more as we relived the excitement, danger, and suspense of sending human beings 384,000km into space to land on an uninhabited moon and return. Most Americans over the age of five in 1969 can tell you where they were when the Eagle landed on July 20, 1969, and the world watch
October 8, 2019 Read time: 3 mins
Asphalt is now the most recycled material on the planet, but more capabilities exist for higher percentages of the material in mixes

This past month of July America and much of the world celebrated the 50th anniversary of man setting foot on the moon.

There were speeches, replays of the Saturn V launch and lunar landing videos, interviews with astronauts, and much more as we relived the excitement, danger, and suspense of sending human beings 384,000km into space to land on an uninhabited moon and return. Most Americans over the age of five in 1969 can tell you where they were when the Eagle landed on July 20, 1969, and the world watched Neil Armstrong take “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”. America had won the Space Race. What followed were five more moon landings, but the race was over. Travelling to Mars, our nearest and most similar planet neighbour, was considered impossible due to the human body’s intolerance for zero gravity. Our space program went into decline, and moonwalking became a Michael Jackson dance move. Proponents of space exploration had to console themselves with the space shuttle program for the next twenty-five years until that program ended as well. Reliving the moon landing moment this year has rekindled interest in the field of aerospace engineering and space travel.

I couldn’t help but contrast the moon landing anniversary and the scaled back space program with what has happened with asphalt recycling during the same time period (perhaps because I have ties to both).  While some will argue the earliest Hot Mix Asphalt (HMA) recycling goes back as far as 1915, HMA recycling saw its initial US “launch” in the late 1960s. There were no flags planted on projects or live TV coverage and, truth be known, many of those early projects ‘failed to launch”. And there was opposition to the crazy notion that used pavements could be reused or “recycled” (much like those who didn’t believe America should “waste money” on space travel). But despite the early failures, an idea was born, an idea that has grown and blossomed in significant and beneficial ways. 

Who would have guessed or believed asphalt pavements would become the world’s most recycled material?  Asphalt recycling efforts led to the development of giant milling machines to remove old asphalt roadway layers so they could be reprocessed and reused. The modern asphalt plant has been fundamentally redesigned with recycling and at high percent RAP incorporated in mind. Many different techniques and recycling methodologies have been developed, from in-place recycling to cold central plant recycling (CCPR), and so much more. From reheating and recompacting existing pavement to fix potholes, to large asphalt manufacturing plants that incorporate up to 100% RAP, asphalt recycling knowledge and recycled mix performance have come a long way since those early launch failures.  

It has been 50 years since man set foot on the moon, and some say we have taken space travel as far as it can go. Have we taken asphalt recycling as far as it can go?  Not a chance! The average RAP content for surface mixes in the US is only around 20%, while other countries successfully incorporate RAP percentages as high as 80%. Rejuvenators, softer binders, synthetic oils, and new technologies offer the opportunity to reach as high as 100% RAP in a variety of ways while equalling or exceeding the performance of virgin mixes. The future remains bright for asphalt recycling! 

Related Content

  • Innovations in plant development
    September 19, 2024
    Several of the major manufacturers are offering key innovations for the asphalt plant segment – Mike Woof writes
  • Attitude is key to sustainability, says Volvo CE’s Thomas Bitter
    June 27, 2018
    Whether you are in the global Volvo Ocean Race or working on-site locally, sustainability is about attitude as much as technology. David Arminas reports. Technology, sustainability and safety. We ignore these often related themes at our peril. This was the key point made by Volvo Group chief executive Martin Lundstedt during his brief opening presentation at the start of the Building Tomorrow Conference in Spain last October. The conference took place within the harbour of Alicante that was bustling wit
  • Without political intervention, new technologies for using waste rubber in roads will not take off
    November 14, 2017
    New technologies to make rubber modification of asphalt are under development and testing. But political will is the real key to diverting old tyres from landfill - Kristina Smith reports. A new way to introduce end-of-life tyre rubber into asphalt mixes could be the key to diverting more tyres away from landfill, according to Dr Davide Lo Presti, principal research fellow at the Nottingham Transportation Engineering Centre (NTEC) at the University of Nottingham.
  • Ammann pushes the utilisation rate of recycled asphalt even higher
    December 16, 2016
    The Ammann team was confident it had a game-changer on its stand when the 2007 bauma exhibition opened in Munich. The company’s RAH100 asphalt dryer was about to take a massive step forward for the global highway industry – and to lead the market for years to come Ammann’s RAH100 wasn’t a simple upgrade of an existing product. It was much bigger than that. The dryer offered the ability to utilise 100% recycled asphalt … a benefit no other competitor could match. “That 100% utilisation rate was a miles