Skip to main content

Recycling road gully waste

Recycling waste gully materials can save costs and also meet tough European sustainability requirements, with one firm offering a novel solution The effects of the Landfill Directive together with the annual increase in Landfill Tax have significantly increased the cost of disposal of gully waste. This is currently around £50/tonne but is expected to rise to £80/tonne in 2014 in the UK, although other parts of Europe may differ. As a consequence, this has increased the operating costs for companies pro
September 26, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
Processing road gully waste can deliver quality aggregates for re-use

Recycling waste gully materials can save costs and also meet tough European sustainability requirements, with one firm offering a novel solution

The effects of the Landfill Directive together with the annual increase in Landfill Tax have significantly increased the cost of disposal of gully waste. This is currently around £50/tonne but is expected to rise to £80/tonne in 2014 in the UK, although other parts of Europe may differ. As a consequence, this has increased the operating costs for companies providing gully emptying services. The effects have been felt not only in the UK but also by other countries in the EC.

Whilst the revised Waste Framework Directive (rWFD) details that all EU Member States recycle a minimum of 70% of waste generated from construction, demolition and excavated material (CD&E) by the year 2020, the UK is in the top 10 countries in Europe for recycling CD&E waste. However in terms of recycling road sweepings and gully waste Europe is leading the way and the UK should take a few lessons from its European cousins.

In the UK each winter over 2 million tonnes of rock salt and grit is spread onto the road networks at a cost of over £150 million/year. With this material eventually going to landfill the irony is that in the following year the 2309 Highways Agency struggles to provide adequate supplies for the next cold spell. Many European countries currently recycle road grit to re-mix with salt for spreading on the highways. In order for the UK to stay in the top 10 of recycling countries in Europe, road grit and gully waste could be the next initiative. The technology is available now to recoup what is currently a wasted resource, and such actions will protect stocks of virgin aggregates. 

Road sweepings comprise mainly of grit from road dressings, small grade aggregate, organic material, ferrous products and a small amount of hydrocarbons, however up to 98% of the material is capable of being processed and reclaimed. The saline constituent of the rock salt is dissolved and washed out but the grit and the aggregate material that remains is reclaimable. The reclaimed grit can be remixed with rock salt and reused and the larger aggregates can be reclaimed and used for other applications. Sand or grit forms 50% of the overall material recycled, with 40% being larger aggregate and the organic material constituting the remaining 10% can be composted.
Gully waste typically comprises of small stones, sand, gravel, grit, ferrous material, paper litter and hydrocarbons with organic matter mixed in. However, the main constituent of gully waste, even when the free water has been allowed to drain off is water. As this constitutes up to 60% of the total volume of gully waste, it seems foolish to send it to land fill.

However the UK is picking up the pace. In January 2012 Warwickshire County Council in the UK installed a recycling facility for road sweepings and gully waste in Wolverhampton, working with six waste disposal authorities in the region. Like many local authorities, Warwickshire County Council was sending its road sweepings and gulley waste to landfill.  7506 CDEnviro installed a 15tonne/hour recycling system which included a full water treatment system. SITA UK operates the facility under contract which is capable of treating up to 40,000tonnes of material/year. During the project in excess of 300,000tonnes of material will be diverted from landfill, creating in excess of £10 million cashable efficiency savings over seven years, with the projected increase of the overall material recycled being in excess of 3%.  

Peter Craven from CDEnviro said, “We have seen great uptake in the concept of road grit and gully waste recycling in the UK and through our partners in Europe. With the processing of this material being charged at approximately 50% of the cost to landfill it makes economic sense without even taking into consideration the recycling of the processed material. This technology has led to a reduction in waste going to landfill of up to 75%, whilst producing a high value product.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Environmental impact drives warm mix growth
    November 14, 2012
    Warm mix asphalt can save energy and the environment, cutting emissions of carbon dioxide and other harmful gases, but are environmental arguments enough for clients and contractors? Kristina Smith asks Though popular in the United States, warm mix asphalt is still a technology waiting to happen in the rest of the world. Chemical companies who imagined a meteoric rise in sales are still waiting for the right economic conditions to allow warm mix to start taking serious market share from hot mix. “In Europe
  • More countries look to warm mix
    November 21, 2019
    Though warm mix technology has been around for decades, take-up has been patchy - will renewed environmental pressure change that? asks Kristina Smith
  • Bitumen additives raise environmental questions
    February 14, 2012
    New products, including additives, are coming onto the market to help reduce the cost of producing bitumen. Patrick smith reports. According to Eng. Paolo Visconti of Iterchimica, environmental issues and the health and safety of operators of manufacturing plants and workers laying bituminous mixes have raised long debates on the possible harmfulness of fumes which are emitted when heating these mixes at the temperatures (160-180°C) required for their production. "If, on the one hand, the effects on operato
  • Tarmac tyre trial on UK motorway
    August 7, 2019
    Highways England is carrying out trials of rubberised asphalt on a busy stretch of UK motorway. A section of the M1 near the city of Leicester has been repaved by contractor Tarmac, using a special asphalt mix containing crumb rubber from recycled motor vehicle tyres. Tarmac has developed the mix specially to meet tough requirements from Highways England. This trial will determine how the stretch of highway, located between junction 22 and junction 23, behaves in terms of running wear, skid resistance and