A new dawn for buried garbage? An investigation of the marketability of previously disposed shredder waste

•A framework was developed to explore the market potential of disposed waste.•Only the metals (8%) could be recovered, 92% of the waste had no resort.•Marketability needs to become a central issue for landfill mining.•Pre-treatment and after-treatment of the waste should be deployed.•To overcome reg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Waste management (Elmsford) 2017-02, Vol.60, p.417-427
Hauptverfasser: Johansson, N., Krook, J., Frändegård, P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A framework was developed to explore the market potential of disposed waste.•Only the metals (8%) could be recovered, 92% of the waste had no resort.•Marketability needs to become a central issue for landfill mining.•Pre-treatment and after-treatment of the waste should be deployed.•To overcome regulatory obstacles, greater flexibility is called for. This paper examines the market potential of disposed shredder waste, a resource that is increasingly emphasized as a future mine. A framework with gate requirements of various outlets was developed and contrasted with a pilot project focusing on excavated waste from a shredder landfill, sorted in an advanced recycling facility. Only the smallest fraction by percentage had an outlet, the metals (8%), which were sold according to a lower quality class. The other fractions (92%) were not accepted for incineration, as construction materials or even for re-deposition. Previous studies have shown similar lack of marketability. This means that even if one fraction can be recovered, the outlet of the other material is often unpredictable, resulting in a waste disposal problem, which easily prevents a landfill mining project altogether. This calls for marketability and usability of deposited waste to become a central issue for landfill mining research. The paper concludes by discussing how concerned actors can enhance the marketability, for example by pre-treating the disposed waste to acclimatize it to existing sorting methods. However, for concerned actors to become interested in approaching unconventional resources such as deposited waste, greater regulatory flexibility is needed in which, for example, re-deposition could be allowed as long as the environmental benefits of the projects outweigh the disadvantages.
ISSN:0956-053X
1879-2456
1879-2456
DOI:10.1016/j.wasman.2016.05.015