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Demonstration of a Recycling, Energy Efficient and Environmentally Friendly Modular Batch Heater Plant

Reference: LIFE03 ENV/UK/000615 | Acronym: Ref Project

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

BACKGROUND

Traditionally, quarry and road stone producers throughout Europe have used conventional asphalt plants to manufacture the majority of asphalt products. However, such plants have limitations: - They are designed to produce coated products in large quantities as required for commercial viability only; - The continuous nature of the process causes waste when product recipes are changed and makes such changes more difficult; - Plants are stationary and have a significant environmental footprint; - Plants also require large storage areas to maintain operational levels of feedstock; - Wastage problems occur because of operational difficulties in matching the various elements of the process; - Systems have high fuel consumptions, wasting both electricity and gas/oil through an inability to modulate burners and dryers and; - Plants have high maintenance costs. Batch-heater coating plants were historically designed for particular applications for a small sector of the British market. However, progressive development of production features, involving additional mechanical components and updated process control systems, means that these plants now offer a high degree of control for the production of coated roadstone. The advantages of batch heaters are that they are: - able to produce the product in variable quantities from 0.5 to 5.0 tonnes, on a batch- by-batch basis; - able to offer a range of 150 product mixes; - suitable for urban locations; - require a smaller storage area; and - leave a smaller environmental footprint. However, like large asphalt plants, batch-heater coating plants use large motors to operate conveyors, fans and burners to heat the aggregate to the required temperature. They use high levels of power and consume a considerable amount of fuel. This is further exacerbated by the difficulty involved in modulating the burners or fans when lower temperatures are required.


OBJECTIVES

The overall objective of the REF project was to produce the first environmentally friendly modular batch-heater plant, which could be disassembled, moved and reassembled with minimum cost and effort. Specific objectives were to: - build and demonstrate an innovative industrial process to produce asphalt-coated products; - demonstrate an innovative filtration system, reducing emissions to below 10mg/m³; - reduce the consumption of power (electricity) and fuel (gas/oil) of this industrial process by up to 75%; - increase the use of recycled materials within the process to 50%, reducing the level of virgin product required; and - significantly reduce noise levels of the process.


RESULTS

The REF project has successfully redesigned every major aspect of batch heaters, making them portable, clean enough to use in urban environments and powerful enough to produce any required roadstone recipe. It could be considered a success story. The main quantitative results are: - up to 75% reduction in electricity consumption; - up to 30% reduction in gas and fuel oil consumption; - reduced particulate emissions to below 10mg/M3; - 50% increase in the level of recycled materials that can be used in the process; - a reduction in raw aggregate materials from the quarry when replaced by recycled materials; - reductions in landfill usage when recycled materials are utilised; - increased acceptable quality of commercial end products (asphalt etc.) with a range of 400 product mixes; - a reduction in the cost of and emissions from fuel in transporting end products to their point of use; - reduced visual impact by lower height of plant and; - a further reduction in environmental impact when plant is located adjacent to significant road works. It is worth noting that the maximum particulate output permitted for asphalt plants in the UK has recently been reduced from 100 mg/m3 to 50 mg/m3. As the REF plant was already demonstrating particulate output of <10 mg/m3 at the close of the LIFE project, there is considerable scope to reduce the regulatory maximum even more, thereby forcing many existing plants to adopt the cleaner technology demonstrated by the project. At the close of the LIFE project, the beneficiary was planning an “optimisation package”, involving further research to develop a set of innovative products that could be applied or adapted to suit many older inefficient batch heaters and conventional asphalt plants across the UK and Europe. These products, incorporating all the REF innovations, would include the pulse jet filter, computer controlled process optimisation by modulating burner, burner controller, inverter to control the barrel speed and other products. The sustainability and continuation of the project would depend on the successful marketing of the new technology in the UK and other European countries. Dissemination activities of the project included the creation of a project website (http://www.mixlance.com/LIFE), two CDs, the production and distribution of 5000 computer mouse mats, an exhibition stand at the Hillhead 2005 Quarrying and Recycling Show and an announcement about the project in the Quarry Management Journal. This project has been awarded the title of "Best of the Best" from a shortlist of 22 "Best" LIFE Environment projects in 2006-2007 The REF project has successfully redesigned every major aspect of batch heaters, making them portable, clean enough to use in urban environments and powerful enough to produce any required roadstone recipe. It could be considered a success story. The main quantitative results are: - up to 75% reduction in electricity consumption; - up to 30% reduction in gas and fuel oil consumption; - reduced particulate emissions to below 10mg/M3; - 50% increase in the level of recycled materials that can be used in the process; - a reduction in raw aggregate materials from the quarry when replaced by recycled materials; - reductions in landfill usage when recycled materials are utilised; - increased acceptable quality of commercial end products (asphalt etc.) with a range of 400 product mixes; - a reduction in the cost of and emissions from fuel in transporting end products to their point of use; - reduced visual impact by lower height of plant and; - a further reduction in environmental impact when plant is located adjacent to significant road works. It is worth noting that the maximum particulate output permitted for asphalt plants in the UK has recently been reduced from 100 mg/m3 to 50 mg/m3. As the REF plant was already demonstrating particulate output of <10 mg/m3 at the close of the LIFE project, there is considerable scope to reduce the regulatory maximum even more, thereby forcing many existing plants to adopt the cleaner technology demonstrated by the project. At the close of the LIFE project, the beneficiary was planning an “optimisation package”, involving further research to develop a set of innovative products that could be applied or adapted to suit many older inefficient batch heaters and conventional asphalt plants across the UK and Europe. These products, incorporating all the REF innovations, would include the pulse jet filter, computer controlled process optimisation by modulating burner, burner controller, inverter to control the barrel speed and other products. The sustainability and continuation of the project would depend on the successful marketing of the new technology in the UK and other European countries. Dissemination activities of the project included the creation of a project website (http://www.mixlance.com/LIFE), two CDs, the production and distribution of 5000 computer mouse mats, an exhibition stand at the Hillhead 2005 Quarrying and Recycling Show and an announcement about the project in the Quarry Management Journal. This project has been awarded the title of "Best of the Best" from a shortlist of 22 "Best" LIFE Environment projects in 2006-2007

ADMINISTRATIVE DATA


Reference: LIFE03 ENV/UK/000615
Acronym: Ref Project
Start Date: 06/10/2003
End Date: 06/04/2006
Total Eligible Budget: 3,346,876 €
EU Contribution: 1,004,062 €
Project Location: Measham

CONTACT DETAILS


Coordinating Beneficiary: Mixlance (Technical Services) Ltd
Legal Status: PRIVATE
Address: 'The Bank', 66-68 High Street, DE12 7HR, Measham,


LIFE Project Map

ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES ADDRESSED

THEMES

  • Savings
  • Mining - Quarrying

KEYWORDS

  • clean technology
  • energy saving
  • emission reduction
  • road construction material

TARGET EU LEGISLATION

  • Directive 92/72 - Air pollution by ozone (21.09.1992)
  • Directive 84/360 - Combating of air pollution from industrial plants (28.06.1984)
  • Directive 2002/49 - Assessment and management of environmental noise (Noise Directive) (25.06.2002)
  • Directive 96/61 - Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control (IPPC) (24.09.1996)

PARTNERSHIPS

Name Status Type
 Mixlance (Technical Services) Ltd ACTIVE Coordinator
 Marini S.p.A ACTIVE Participant
 Rob Hudson Consultancy ACTIVE Participant
 RMC Aggregates (UK) Ltd ACTIVE Participant
 Mixlance (Pulse Jet Filters) Ltd ACTIVE Participant
 Batching & Blending Systems Ltd ACTIVE Participant
 Rossi Gearmotors Ltd ACTIVE Participant
 W.T.Parker Electrical Contractors Ltd ACTIVE Participant
 Kendrick Design ACTIVE Participant
 Nu-Way Limited ACTIVE Participant

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