Skip to main content

Increased use of RAP in asphalt production

In the US asphalt pavement mix producers are improving the sustainability pro_ le of roads through the incorporation of recycled materials and the use of energy-saving warm-mix asphalt technologies. According to the latest survey of asphalt mix producers conducted by the National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA) in partnership with the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), more than 67.65 million tonnes of recycled materials was put to use in new asphalt pavement mixtures during the 2014 construction
December 8, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Use of recycled asphalt continues to grow

The use of recycled materials within warm mix asphalt continues to grow in the US

In the US asphalt pavement mix producers are improving the sustainability profile of roads through the incorporation of recycled materials and the use of energy-saving warm-mix asphalt technologies.

According to the latest survey of asphalt mix producers conducted by the 3464 National Asphalt Pavement Association (NAPA) in partnership with the 2410 Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), more than 67.65 million tonnes of recycled materials was put to use in new asphalt pavement mixtures during the 2014 construction season. The major sources of this material were asphalt pavement reclaimed from old roads and parking lots as well as recycled asphalt roofing shingles.

According to NAPA, over 99% of material removed during maintenance or repair activities ends up being put back to use in new pavements.

The tons of asphalt pavement mixtures produced using recycled and reclaimed materials saw more than a 6% increase from 2013 to 2014, which is a significantly greater increase than the increase in total tons of asphalt mixture produced during the same time period. The survey found that nearly 64.94 million tonnes of reclaimed asphalt pavement (RAP) and 1.71 million tonnes of reclaimed asphalt shingles (RAS) were used in new asphalt pavement mixes in the United States during 2014. An additional 73.1 million tonnes of RAP were used as aggregate, cold mix, and other road-building activities. Reclaiming and reusing the asphalt cement and aggregate in RAP and RAS saved about US$2.8 billion in 2014 compared to the use of virgin asphalt binder and aggregates.

This helps keep asphalt pavement mixture costs competitive and allows road owners to achieve more roadway maintenance and construction activities with limited budgets. Producers were also asked in the survey about ground tyre rubber, steel and blast furnace slags, and other waste material repurposed into pavements. Although national estimates of usage were not calculated, survey respondents reported using nearly 1.17 million tonnes of these materials in 2014 in the production of more than 7.2 million tonnes of asphalt pavement mixes.

In addition to increased use of recycled materials, asphalt mix producers continue to increase the use of energy-saving warm-mix asphalt technologies. In 2014, 102.65 million tonnes of warm-mix asphalt was produced — about a third of all asphalt pavement mix production. This marks a greater than 577% increase in the use of warm mix since 2009, the first year the survey was conducted. Warm-mix asphalt is produced with a range of technologies that reduce the production and placement temperature of asphalt pavement mixtures. A variety of environmental, worker safety, and construction benefits have been realized through the adoption of warm-mix asphalt. In 2009, FHWA selected warm-mix asphalt as one of the first technologies targeted for deployment through its Every Day Counts initiative.

In 15 states, more than half of all asphalt pavement mixtures were produced as warm-mix asphalt, and in six of them, more than 75% was produced as warm mix. This is an incredible rate of adoption for a technology introduced just a decade ago,” said NAPA president Mike Acott. “We are already seeing construction and performance benefits, as well as energy savings, with warm-mix asphalt. We continue to focus research and engineering efforts on the use of recycled materials, warm mix, and other innovations to make our long-lasting, high performance asphalt pavements even more sustainable.”

The survey was conducted in mid-2015. Results from 228 companies with 1,185 plants in all 50 states, along with data from State Asphalt Pavement Associations for 35 states were used to compile the report.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Arizona Chemical additive rejuvenates extra-hard reclaimed asphalt
    November 25, 2016
    Arizona Chemical and Eurovia report that they have successfully used reclaimed asphalt that was specified as too hard for re-use on high-value road applications.
  • Green asphalt options from Ammann's new plants
    March 6, 2024
    Ammann is offering innovative advances for the asphalt plant segment - Mike Woof writes
  • Take control in asphalt plants
    September 24, 2018
    Control systems play a crucial role in effective and efficient asphalt production. Production manager Richard Stott works for Aggregate Industries and focuses on ensuring that output is maximised. At the same time, Stott also follows the company policy on utilising the most sustainable technology and processes available Delivering on both fronts is no small task, but the firm has achieved that at its facility in Sheffield in the UK. RAP utilisation is high and meets the company’s sustainability goals. Pr
  • Roadtec’s RT-500 trailer: integral to cold in-place recycling
    August 4, 2017
    The Roadtec RT-500 is a mobile trailer that can be pulled and fed by a Roadtec RX-900 milling machine for cold in-place recycling. But it also can be set up on site as a central cold-mix plant, according to the company, based in the US state of Tennessee. The machine features closed loop sizing with an on-board vibratory screen and horizontal shaft impact crusher. The process is designed to prevent having to pre-process RAP when the RT-500 is used as a cold-mix plant. The RT-500 also has a weigh bridge on b