Skip to main content

Circular salt for Sweden

A new mineral reclamation process by Swedish recycling group Ragn-Sells could bring more environmentally-friendly-produced road salt to Scandinavia’s highways this coming winter.
June 22, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Swedish road maintenance contractor Peab will be using the circular NaCI salt in Stockholm, Uppsala and the suburbs during winter 2022/23 (image courtesy Peab)

In May 2020 Ragn-Sells started construction of the first Ash2Salt process plant at the group’s recycling site at Högbytorp site just outside Stockholm – a US$55 million investment. Initially, the plant will be able to receive and process up to 135,000 tonnes of fly ash annually – just under half of the 300,000 tonnes of fly ash that Sweden produces each year. Right now, around half of this is sent to a discontinued limestone quarry on the Norwegian island of Langøya, near Oslo.

Fly ash, which is classified as hazardous waste, is what is left-over from scrubbing the flue gas from waste incineration carried out by local communities and cities. The Ash2Salt plant will wash the fly ash and recover its constituent salts: sodium chloride, calcium chloride and potassium chloride and sell these forward to manufacturers of various products and a range of commercial applications, including road salt manufacture.

Meanwhile, EasyMining has a contract to supply GC Reiber, based in Oslo, Norway, and one of northern Europe’s largest manufacturers and distributors of industrial-use salts, including road salt. In turn, Reiber has signed a contract with road maintenance company Peab to supply it with road salt starting by the end of this year for winter 2022/23.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bitumen technology: crude moves and carbon savings for the industry
    July 11, 2022
    As bitumen suppliers look to replace Russian sources of crude oil, there’s a race to get biogenic asphalts to market – and bank those carbon-saving benefits - Kristina Smith writes
  • Pūhoi-to-Warkworth motorway project
    September 25, 2020
    After a hiatus because of the COVID-19 lockdown, work has restarted on what will be one of New Zealand’s most visually impressive motorways. Andrew Thackwray, senior manager for project delivery for Waka Kotahi, the New Zealand Transport Agency, explains
  • Modern aggregate crushing and screening
    July 9, 2012
    Turning aggregates production into a truly industrial process and providing customers with accurately fine-tuned aggregates mixes is the secret behind the success of Vezzola, a family-owned company with operations in Italy's Lake Garda region. Vezzola's fully-equipped stationary plant in Montichiari, probably the country's most modern facility of this type, can produce up to 500 different aggregates recipes. The plant is another successful delivery by Metso's Mining and Construction Technology. Processing s
  • Mixing recycled and fresh asphalt reduces costs
    February 14, 2012
    An innovative asphalt plant is allowing the use of recycled materials and achieving major cost benefits - Mike Woof reports. UK construction firm FM Conway is seeing the benefit of the €11.5 million (£10 million) it has invested in its asphalt production facilities at Erith in Kent, close to UK capital London, since buying the site in 2005. The biggest single investment in the facility has been a new Benninghoven asphalt plant, which was commissioned in June 2010 and is now the core of the Erith operation.