Conference
reports
6th Mineral Waste Utilization Symposium The buff-coloured volumes of collected papers of the biennial symposia jointly sponsored by the US Bureau of Mines and the Illinois Institute of Technology Research
Institute
of resource in scope
are now essential
recovery.
and
the
reference
Since their inception
6th
symposium
tools for all workers
in 1968,
included
47
sessions, over a period of two days. 6th Mineral Chicago,
2-3
May
papers
Waste
delivered
IJtilization
in the field
have widened during
six
Symposium,
19 78.
The proceedings were opened by the Assistant Director - Metallurgy, US Bureau of Mines, who took as his theme a definition of conservation as the sum of maximum utilization with minimum waste. Citing as example practice at a zinc mine in Tennessee, where an ore containing about 4% of zinc and more than 95% limestone was processed into zinc, stone and agricultural limestone as fractions, the speaker saleable proceeded to examine the current status mineral extraction of the primary industries. The fact that the average grade of copper ore mined has fallen 1900 to 3% in around from considerably less than 1% in 1978, makes clear the need for development of uses for the byproducts of extraction. in other obtain Similar situations extraction processes, notably in the iron industry. The crucial question is whether the increased amounts of energy and effort required to produce metals from ores whose grades fall inexorably may partially be offset by the perceived values for byproducts formerly discarded. Some 870 million tonnes of waste are generated annually by the copper industry, and 320 million tonnes by the phosphates industry. The wastes of all the primary metal extraction operations in the USA are probably more than 2 x lo9 tonnes, exceeding by an order of magnitude the arising of municipal solid waste. For the most economical total operation it is essential that useful applications be developed for fractions now discarded. Iron slags containing 25-30% iron are
RESOURCES
the events
POLICY
useful copper potentially for cementation, and sulphur recovery from smelter gases could far exceed the possible market for the element. One may look forward to the time when scrap will be a major and not a minor source of materials. This, of already applies to certain course, specialized areas of industry such as steel production in minimills, operating on a 100% scrap charge.
Legislative help Whilst the materials secondary achieve recovery industries often recovery rates, praiseworthy performance in some sectors is still rather poor. Congressional legislation has already proved a spur to the development of recovery technologies, but the industry may expect further interference both by the lawyers and the politicians. The unusually speedy progress of the 1976 Resource Recovery Act is evidence enough of the seriousness with which the Congress views the question of resource recovery. However, the complexity of government interest is exemplified by the fact that no fewer than 18 federal agencies are currently involved in problems of resource recovery. A movement towards maximum use of recycled materials may prove significant in the context of more than 9 000 federal facilities that may in future be required, in their ordering. to specify a minimum content of secondary materials. In the final analysis, the acceptability
December
1978
of any material. primary or secondary, depends upon its meeting the specified performance data for a particular application. The American Society for the Testing of Materials is examining the whole question of specifications for secondary materials. Whilst concerned primarily with wastes destined for disposal, as compared with scrap metals for which recycling channels are already well established. subcommittees of the main E38 committee deal with glass, metals. paper and with both ferrous and non-ferrous metals. Amid the wealth of operating data on the treatment of municipal solid waste (MSW), little is written on the day-today problems of the plant. In one contribution, however, attention was drawn to the hazards attendant upon the presence in the waste stream of items such as cans of combustible materials. quantities of blasting powder, and even dynamite. Up until April 1976 the shredding of 7.5 million tons of MSW had been accompanied by 97 explosions. of which 69 did significant damage, averaging about $50000 per incident. The use of devices that flood the shredder halogenated with hydrocarbons, or that damp the refuse with controlled moisture additions, were only two of the measures described in a paper dealing with a much neglected facet of the subject. Often overlooked by all but the more optimistic conservationists is the fact that world resources of many materials are. to all intents and purposes, practically inexhaustible. The crust of the earth contains vast tonnages of almost all metals. It has been calculated, for instance, that the first 2 000 m depth of the crust sufficient contains aluminium to last for 1 500 million years at current rates of consumption. The key to the exploitation of these riches is energy. and the cost of the finished metals will reflect the cost of the energy required to extract them.
Energy costs It is an Article of Faith that secondary materials may be produced from scrap at a fraction of the energy investment required for corresponding primary supplies. That this is not invariably the case may be demonstrated if one reflects upon the
295
Cortferetrce energy
reports
required
to
collect
dispersed
wastes such as beverage cans discarded over a wide area, or to beneficiate as would
be necessary
of aluminium used
to
from
bchoves
us
analyses
of
proccdurcs
wrappings
cigarettes.
lo
them
for the recovery
the foil
package
make
If
careful
collection
to establish
thus
energy
and
data
were
types
reference
to
the
scrap
operation.
for
deficient
can almost form
an
world
were outlined systetn
them.
and where
times as much energy drosses,
that required
with
iron.
some
versus an
Anti-pollution that
the
on
more
cost
pollution
refuse than
an
has
the
Such
can
incinerator
enrichment referred
of
Economics The
dramatic
rise in oil prices
1973-74
has changed
resource
reclamation
of
refuse-
Significant
the economics and
now
comparable A town
and the current
fabrication
that
which
form of the waste product, albeit
similar.
less
Further
variations
choice
of
were for
presented
could the
the
clean
be pot-melted
product,
and
consume
virgin
material,
energy
possible.
Efforts
directed
towards
winning methods
296
generation
complete
of
avoid as
the
required
be new
is
daily
many speakers
pitfalls
of
designing
are fossil of the
that
of
surprising
the
processing
differences
are,
compound
evaluation
any
Only gradually has it been widely recognized that the steady markets that must be enjoyed
by recovered
criteria.
exceeds
that
$1.5 x 10y will be required. Some 35% of the systems currently under proposal
3.0%
and
sell
costs
markets suggested
RDF,
ranging
and from
need for guaranteed
recovered
the
idea
products of
was cited
of the city
tonnes/day.
burn,
for
initially,
of refuse and that will developed to 1 800
Ferrous
be the products
will
The
of Albany,
where boilers are under construction that
has
partnerships
between city and state in the USA. cast
will $4.4.
being
Data
metals and fuel wilt
of a separation
system
to
recovery average were
and
of 6%. also
l-23%
lead,
tin
remains recovered Similar
to
be
of
of much
make
the
acceptable. in
the
degradation
paper
of paper of fibre
of the properties.
Here, the aim of recovery
POLICY
eddy-
capable to
exist
length to the detriment
RESOURCES
and,
or
where the re-pulping
paper
refuse
bismuth
are
done
causes successive
separate
the
generally
problems
industry,
In
improvement,
metal
an
picks up silicon,
and
some
0.16. with
lead and tin
heavy-medium techniques
effecting
mobile
zinc
Bismuth.
aluminium
although
showing in
contain
problems.
incinerator
current
presented
could
on
specification
reclaimed
centres
silicon
products depend
meet
were
aluminium
copper, for
of a
projected
system.
estimated
at
by
which
Meeting specifications
$12 x 10’ and the peak year for investment will probably be 1985, when
extract
of
the difficulty of
able
will
however,
all
their
investment
large
in similar samples examined
in 1970 to 444 000 tonnes by 2000. The capital
as MSW that
in ash and moisture are from different samples.
laboratories,
recovery
of
will
for an eight
estimated
a material
not
is to continue,
680 tonnes/day ultimately be
such
of
people
(MSW),
capacity
reclamation
from fossil fuels
different
will rise from 333 000 tonnes
an installation
less than 30% efficient,
but rises are
those
waste
It
The general that,
reported
100 000
The paramount
such electro-
fact
the
if recovery
27ltonne.
are
have
of RDF
to 34 tonnes/h
equipment
since
these
with of
solid
shift.
operate
design
electrical obscure
as a
hour
exist for the
though,
that steps
of
since power is usually
the
zinc
10% of
savings
or electro-refining. may
tin,
high-purity
should,
routes
convenience
lead,
showing,
for
otherwise
energy-intensive
data
for only about
would
reclamation
and
die-cast
Since markets
pot-melted
by the
and reclaimed
required
redistillation.
influence.
industries
that
energy
serious
from
degraded product
equivalent
method,
and zinc
example,
affects the may exert a
prices
generate about 6 I 000 tonnes/annum municipal
are introduced
refining
titanium,
paper
type
Oil
now more or less stabilized.
of
the
operation,
the
(RDF).
of
fuels.
product,
to
metal
in a field where so many
differences reported
cost
of the
fuels
during
variations
re-emphasized
or implicitly,
it is perhaps
where the economics
finished
heavy
of the effluent gases.
In so heterogeneous
of waste disposal
for
entering
has been shown
the real costs have yet to be determined.
point
actually
pre-
three
with
ie that percentage
in
non-combustibles.
prevent
to
seen in the prices of coal and gas to the
material
and
has exhibited
advantage the
or
loss of profitability yield,
of MSW
a procedure
derived
product
reclaims
of
of
reduce
the fabrication industries which, in turn, have a backward link to the designer. It has been shown that a most serious
incoming
year
of combustibles,
environmental
Explicity
Such
is associated
city
20
the ultimate of 27 elements contained in
separation
control
incinerators
separation
examination
the combustibles
populated
legislation
the
a
to the state, which
destination
rise to $20.
densely
case
under
in
fees of
equipment
one third
have serious implications
is
more expensive.
can now
and tipping this
by
Analyses continue to emerge of the respective merits of direct incineration
rather
disposal
will,
$550 000
from
where the arising is heavily
contaminated
agreement
the large,
Waste
the city
metals and burns the residue.
is
as from clippings
but only
in
meant now
is
than to
is the rule
progressively
equipment itself.
it
be saving
$2.75/tonne. In supplies refuse
costs that only a few years ago
areas.
the
may consume
car
the exception.
30/tonne
the
where
by high oil prices. It the system
that
fuel costs annually.
in a paper
burning
made feasible only is calculated 1980.
in an energy-
to leave lights
Landfill
for
Recovery
borings
than
to
out some of the absurdities
economic
becoming
triple
of the arising
important.
disclosures
of
energy
available
countries
that pointed of
options
were $2-4/tonne
melting
requirements
The
aluminium
special industry.
economics
regulations
energy
or from
with
can arise from restrictions; pollution
abatement aluminium
on the
aluminium in
reclamation environmental
also
the
industrialized
extinguish
metals from
of arising, the
changes
total
of
there is
presented
costs of reclaiming
Major
Some
cheaper
whether
particularly
single-passenger
Useful different
are
refining
a net gain. energy
methods intensive.
is generally
adequate
December
purity
to to
1978
Corzjerence reports blend
with
analysis
new
stock.
showed
that
paper
from
of
equivalent/tonne
oil
scrap
I 008/tonne This
of
traditionall)
of virgin
pulp.
of $52/tonne
wh0
have
remarkable
expertise
in
by methods
that
of sparks skills rising
arc
to
both
and
mechanization.
One
using
currents
eddy
the
transported or
to
to central
the
separators Positive
by removal
another.
is also
eddy-current
of
its
produce
more
plants,
of
the
operating
one from
attempted
of caustic on
material.
using
separators.
out
Hopefully
Any bc
exposed
simply
to
oil
and
paint.
simple
materials
that
become
irretrievable.
Scrap
under
the
cumulatively the melt
to which
evidence
already
build
of
mention
it are or
and
and tin are under
most
are, moreover,
not
is a recirculating
load
conditions,
the
impurity
it is added. exists
of
copper
and
but
two
can level
of
The an
ferrous MSW
undesirable
Associated, food it
metal has
in steel,
fraction
form
of
as it is likely
wastes,
lacquers
contaminates
RESOURCES
costs
of
inflated and
steel paper
commercial
POLICY
as
scrap. ash,
labels,
de-tinning
the
industry
with
the
wastes.
The
the
economics
the
installation will
from
in This
derive RDF
from
products. to
came
County.
plant
come
of
plant
Landfill the
whose
construction
million
will
start-up, to
as
of
meeting
Data
performance
deteriorating reported
some
by the National
Recycling
December
in
is
1978
Industries
areas.
(NARI)
needed
on
the
will
were
drawn
European of
the
before
on
charge.
but in
of
showed
losses
this
an
in
scale
scrap
in is only
liquors.
an
89%
40(X) in water,
and
in air
86%
pollution.
seem destined in
the
estimated
1.4% Japan, 3.3%
obvious ranging a
tiny
to slags
and
benefits
than
iron
74%
in
in
by
1980. costs
Costs 1975 In have
of ore
virgin
in energy
to rise from
USA
conscious reached
one
saving
materials. latter
furnace
The
rather
coke
a
material,
steel
as
practice
comprising
pickle
common
metallurgical
each
of oxidizing
at
the
spectrum
pellet
or
Examples
entire
sparks,
loss energy
American
of
from
GNP
Data
and
incorporation
appear
that
of
and North
quenching
waste
evidently
Association
arc
manufacture.
emphasis
the
makers,
ic the politicians.
of
spares
speaker from
decision
stage
be
every
The absence
overall
of
heat,
with
every
$50-53
to learn
of the
of loss
as sensible
of
Trends in recovery performance current
the
be those
disposal
associated
of
where
may
residuals.
complained
as a case
biggest
only
energy
tonne
using
it was depressing
not
costs
materials
probably
costs.
of total
of
residuals
wastes
steel industry,
degradation
sale
handle
IO%
and
all is energy.
only
and the
the
the iron
took
intractable
but
solid
Canada
associated
million.
our
from
be
to
the
use tow-grade
the
experiments
by
develop
must
not
treatment
the
it
secondary
recognized
materials.
A paper
of
of
well
will
by management
all
that
to
as its raw
use
is also
extrapolate
plant.
recovery.
the
It
by
discriminatory
who
contingency
For
recovered regarded
in
on
materials,
of its markets of
example
other
$28
the expansion
policies
for and
rates
primary
elimination
to
of
to be, with
and
the
is now
to
cases
been
from
to permit
a long-term
tin
long
and
for
freight
ris-&is
materials.
batches
Monroe
be needed
and the
asked
treatment
about
of its revenues
metals
equitable
secondary
industry tax
tonnes.
of
will
more
materials
economically
seems to be in view.
the
135
tonne/day
remainder
No
favourable
is
the valuable
structural
more
of the metal.
galvanizing
corrosion. alternative
is, it
the
of protecting
of
a description
50%
of most
in
study
on
at
used
the
zinc
of
it performs
carried
an MSW
1 800
since
scale.
data
uses
the
a viewpoint
service
capacity
beaker-scale
construction
is vital
Disturbing
contamination. from
in
still
steelmaking
worst
raise
More building
to the properties
during
processes.
up
arc.
that
eliminated
that.
Copper
that
its
eliminate,
co-mingled
detrimental
of steel and two
of
life, be
which
to
are
elements
conditions.
service
contamination,
comparatively
two
during
subsequent
a yield
of
from practical
is by
in the light
tests were
those
full commercial may,
and
tin.
showed
the Bureau
sample
by
results
material
fabrication
residual
solution.
this
ignored
Contamination
product
levels
dissipative
Predictably.
metal
substantial
a
in
simultaneously
Commercial
on
zinc Iost,
optimum
as
low,
be examined
ine\,itably
removal
that
must
to
factory
consumed
disastrously
felt.
that
own
Recovery
Although
of the cans
It is significant
industry.
of total
requires
staionary.
scrap
that
Preparation
facilitates
of
M;IS
portion
his
almost
refuse
solutions
recovery
the seams
ingress
of non-metallics.
being
Y 1%. these
is
pcrccntagc
raw
together.
tests
supplement
many
could,
combustibles,
opening
aluminium
of metals,
than
to
primary
materials,
(ic that
the steelmaker
initial
to minimize
rinse
0.06%
re-shredding
being
and
washed
in attaining
use that
copper
to
ferrous
scrap
the
to assure
melting
on
produce
claimed
product
a
Subsequent of
to
its
contact
containing
by
a view
final
to
and
shredding
metal-caustic
heavy-medium
segregation
in
plant,
of tin-bearing
method,
of
from
obtained
adequate
reported
from
baled
processing
upgrading
concentrate
of Mines
retention
capable
to
fractions
scrap
and
relative
I I1
paper
programme
the
non-magnetic
prior
usable fractions
its
that
with of
reject
in
now
has been evaluated
beneficiation
shredder
Bureau
progress
are
induced
configurations
US
de-
impossible.
with
promising
magnets.
in scvcral
is then
that
aluminium
slipping
purchased
scrap)
alloying
such
both
buy
organic
steel
secondary
niatcrial. of
a refuse
causes
and
were
passage
through
but
tin
that
react
solution.
The
eliminates
bctwccn
easy-
use
stripping
frothing. tin cans
separation
Such
techniques
less subjective
soda
to
post-consumer
tinning
aluminium
common
and,
efforts
to develop
permanent
by the
its surface.
Los&.
made
such
emitted
acquire
rise
The
alloys
on criteria
from
long
labour
being
by
and on the appearance
struck
take
in
the caustic
giving
developed
of the note
on impact
has
grading
depend
with
the
now
contaminants
scrap
performed
operatives
ends
incinerator
of IO cents/l. metallic
been
as the timbre
I
48.5 with
case
oil price
Scgrcgation
metal
about
Moreover,
open
of
compared
to a saving
at a notional
baths.
energy
production
consumed
in the
translates
An
the
of the 0.8%
of
to
an
pollutionalready
of GNP.
297
Corference
reports
Whilst zinc used for galvanizing may be irrecoverable, work continues to recover oxides from the wastes of the galvanizing process itself. Such drosses contain about 65% zinc and are generated in the USA at the rate of over 73 000 tonnes annually. The zinc oxide product is claimed to be suitable for metallurgical and chemical uses, again virgin metal for more releasing demanding applications. This was only one example cited of recovery from a fairly unattractive arising or of the use of entire fractions in less critical capacities. Among the latter were the recycling of pot linings in the primary aluminium industry to recover carbon, lluoride or alumina, exploitation of power station fly ash for alumina, and the use of various kinds of refractories for civil engineering applications.
Constraints in scrap use Many barriers exist to the use of secondary materials; these may be laws, that place regulations. or policies secondary material at a competitive disadvantage compared with their primary counterparts. Of an identified
ferrous scrap in the USA at the end of I975 would support the total purchased scrap requirements of the US steel and foundry industries, plus the export demand. for nearly 14 years. The arguments supported by the reports are now well known. They relate to the aspirations of the scrap consumers who, not unnaturally. seek to ensure the ready availability of inexpensive scrap for the domestic market. a condition encouraged by export embargo. The scrap industry, equally naturally, insists that the fluctuating home market forces it to rely on overseas sales. Thus, it seeks to protect its right to export scrap. This dispute is not new. Indeed, it has for many industrialized countries a familiar ring and re-emphasizes, if any emphasis be needed, the desirability of improving the status of secondary materials. Only when these cease to be regarded as a last resort will the market in them be stabilized and the scrap industry innovate and invest.
41 barriers. 5 have been classified as high priority and include freight rate differentials. that create an $0.79/tonne barrier to the use of scrap iron and steel and $3.65/tonne to the use of scrap aluminium. Data were also presented on depletion allowances and vehicle titling laws. Procurement policies were not found to create barriers to the use of secondary metals, perhaps implying that the economic level of secondary utitiLation has already been reached. Similarly. pollution control requirements were claimed to present no noticeable barrier since, as suggested elsewhere, secondary materials may be produced with minimal damage to the environment. A final reminder of the political overtones of the scrap business came from the Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel. Inc (ISIS). The background to the paper is to be found in two voluminous reports on ferrous scrap. That sponsored by the American Iron and Steel Institute projects that the supply of obsolete scrap will fall short of US domestic demand during the next quinquennium. The ISIS report maintains that the pool of obsolete
Michael The University
E. Henstock
of Nottingham Nottingham,
UK
adding to the capitalization plights that most domestic materials industries face. A number of basic questions have arisen from the advent of this crisis. These include:
Materials policy - planning for consensus
0
The 1978
Henniker
of participants brought
together
researchers August
1978,
Conference
from
from
the USA
on materials and abroad.
1 10 high-level government
Henniker,
materials and
private
administrators, sectors.
a record number biennial
gathering
policy makers,
Henniker
V, 30
and
July-4
New Hampshire.
This was the fifth in the series of weeklong materials policy conferences hosted by the Engineering Foundation in Henniker, New Hampshire, which has become the dean of materials policy gatherings. The theme of Henniker V was ‘Building a consensus on legislation for national materials policy’. However, the economic prominence of the USA in materials matters, combined with the level of attendees and fundamental issues addressed, made the meeting one
298
policy attracted The week-long
of significant international interest. Henniker V documented the critical period which the US materials sector has entered. The continuing energy crisis has brought some recognition of the intimacy of energy and materials and effective policy, yet coherent government policy toward materials is still lacking. Competition from abroad has posed serious threats to US materials industries. At the same time continued environmental constraints are
Do we need a materials policy per se, or do we need an integration of materials needs into overall economic and environmental policies? . Is it time for the USA and other market economies to rely more heavily on central, long-range planning to alleviate materials problems? . Is it inherently dangerous for the USA to let its role as a major materials producer diminish? 0 What are the major factors threatening US materials industries? 0 Are environmental protection and economic health of materials industries incompatible? The question of whether a materials policy per se is desirable provoked
RESOURCES
POLICY
December
1978