Skip to main content

Sripath leads the charge on sustainability

Sustainability may be the paving industry’s current buzzword, but key elements of sustainability have been ingrained in the Sripath ethos since the company’s inception.
June 12, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
Sripath provides easy access to sustainability reports

Sustainability may be the paving industry’s current buzzword, but key elements of sustainability have been ingrained in the Sripath ethos since the company’s inception.

Sripath established its unwavering dedication to sustainability by developing innovative, environmentally friendly additives that enhance performance of bitumen and asphalt mixes, are cost effective and help customers achieve their net-zero carbon goals.

Sripath further demonstrates its commitment to sustainability by embracing transparency and making its Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) and Sustainability Reports easily accessible. These are available on Sripath’s website (see below) for ReLIXER, an asphalt rejuvenator, PGXpand, a bitumen-friendly polymeric-additive and NuMIXER, a green bio-oil bitumen softener or modifier.

“We’re firmly dedicated to quantifying our sustainability impact and are proud to take a leading position in making our sustainability reports easily available to our customers,” said Dr. Krishna Srinivasan, president of Sripath Technologies." Sharing our EPDs as informative and educational tools was the next logical step for us in demonstrating our commitment to environmental responsibility.”

“We invest significantly in research and development, collaborating with top research universities and organisations around the world," said Ranjeet Sandhu, general manager UK for Sripath Innovations. "This reinforces our commitment to designing and developing innovative sustainable products that help reduce the global carbon footprint.” 

One product demonstrating this approach is Sripath’s asphalt rejuvenator, ReLIXER - a blend of bio-based oils, extracted from cultivated crops. The crops capture carbon dioxide from air and convert it into food and nutrients via photosynthesis. Such captured carbon units are retained within the extracted oil and are eventually sequestered within the roadway pavement.

Sripath conducted a comprehensive carbon sequestration (S1) analysis for ReLIXER based on European standards. The results showed a contribution of -2.533kg of CO₂ equivalent from carbon sequestration and a total value of -1.677kg of CO₂ equivalent for the A1 + A2 + A3 + S1 parameter.

“In addition to its environmental credentials, ReLIXER helps restore the functional properties of aged RAP bitumen, reduces the need for virgin bitumen, allows use of high-RAP mixes, delivers roadways with desired performance and durability, and reduces overall mix costs by 5-15%,” said Angela Staudinger, general manager EU for Sripath Innovations.

PGXpand, a bitumen-friendly polymeric-additive, helps boost high-temperature performance while maintaining low-temperature properties. It is highly dosage efficient, helps minimise SBS (styrene-butadiene-styrene) content, improves viscosity and delivers roadways with excellent rutting resistance. PGXpand can help lower energy consumption, reduce production and transportation costs and improve workability.

KoolTEQ, an environmentally friendly warm-mix additive, is designed to reduce the production and paving temperatures of asphalt mixes. It helps lower the carbon footprint, reduce energy consumption and deliver overall cost savings.

“We are proud of our sustainability focus and as leaders in promoting transparency by allowing our customers to easily download our EPDs and sustainability reports. We hope this approach helps our customers meet their own sustainability goals and targets,” noted Vince Aurilio, senior technical director of Sripath.

For more information, visit https://sripath.com

Content produced in association with Sripath

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • EAPA’s 10th Symposium: sustainability and communication issues
    July 19, 2017
    Sustainability and the highways sector’s image issue were two major themes at the 10th symposium of the European Asphalt Paving Association in Paris. Margo Cole reports. Sustainability was explicit or implicit in many presentations during EAPA’s biennial symposium for the paving supply chain. The industry feels that sustainability is its home territory, thanks to an already good – and getting even better - record of recycling of materials. But do buyers and users of roads realise that the design and contrac
  • Looking around the world with bitumen technology
    March 4, 2015
    Russia needs polymer-modified bitumen; the UK is embracing US-style pavement preservation technology and gearing up to import more bitumen; and Italy prepares to export innovative modifying technology; plus a look at the market in Asia Pacific and the Middle East – Kristina Smith reports. The Total Group has announced two recent deals which underline the changing bitumen market around the world. In Moscow, it is constructing a new type of polymer-modified bitumen (PMB) plant in joint venture with Gazprom Ne
  • New tests for modified bitumens and mixes with RAP
    December 19, 2014
    This month we learn about a new test which is helping to predict the performance of asphalt mixtures containing recycled materials and modifiers, and we showcase some of the new testing equipment recently launched - writes Kristina Smith Researchers in the US have come up with a new test to help owners and contractors better predict the performance of their roads. “The problem is that the current tests cannot determine the performance of new materials,” said Dr Haleh Azari, manager of the AASHTO Advanced P
  • Ma-estro turns quarry operators into skilled Q-PILOTS
    July 3, 2023
    As the adoption of artificial intelligence-based technology sweeps across various industrial sectors, concerns have surfaced about the potential displacement of human labour and professional expertise. In response, Ma-estro is championing AI-driven innovation as a means of bucking the trend, placing people back at the core of the quarrying sector with tools designed to enhance and improve human labour rather than supplant it.