Recycling process involves collecting the metals, processing them, and then eventually having them shredded and then melted in furnaces at high temperatures to produce blocks or sheets to be sold to manufacturers of metal products.
Recycling process involves collecting the metals, processing them, and then eventually having them shredded and then melted in furnaces at high temperatures to produce blocks or sheets to be sold to manufacturers of metal products.
The process involves simply re-melting the metal, which is far less expensive and energy-intensive than creating new aluminium through the electrolysis of aluminium oxide (Al2O3), which must first be mined from bauxite ore and then refined using the Bayer process.
Plastic recycling refers to the process of recovering waste or scrap plastic and reprocessing the materials into functional and useful products. The goal of recycling plastic is to reduce high rates of plastic pollution while putting less pressure on virgin materials to produce brand new plastic products.
Electronics waste, commonly known as e–scrap or e–waste, is the trash we generate from broken, and obsolete electronic devices. E–waste or electronics recycling is the process of recovering material from old devices to use in new products.
Incineration serves in waste management as a way to treat waste through controlled burning. This treatment is often used in the production of electricity as it reduces the mass of waste up to 96 percent.
Metal fabrication is the process of building machines and structures from raw metal materials. The process includes cutting, burning, welding, machining, forming, and assembly to create the final product.
Electrical cables are generally composed of a metal conductor inner housed in a plastic insulation. Recycling cables aids in the resource recovery of both the metal and the plastic outer for reuse.
Commercial waste recycling is the reclamation of scrap materials from industries or businesses.
The vehicles are shredded and the metal content is recovered for recycling. The rest is further sorted by machine for recycling of additional materials such as glass and plastics. The remainder, known as automotive shredder residue, is put into a landfill.
Any unwanted household product labeled as flammable, toxic, corrosive, or reactive. The most common products include aerosols, anti-freeze, asbestos, fertilizers, motor oil, paint supplies, photo chemicals, poisons, and solvents.
Biohazardous waste, also called infectious waste is waste contaminated with potentially infectious agents or other materials that are deemed a threat to public health or the environment.
Hazardous chemical waste includes: Chemicals that can no longer be used for their intended use (e.g. aged or surplus inventory) Mislabeled or unlabeled chemicals. Abandoned chemicals. Material in deteriorating or damaged containers.
We process straight tubes, U-tubes and circular lamps, using a technique that separates the metal, glass, and mercury-containing phosphors, segregating each component into separate containers.
The mechanical processes which are normally employed to prepare the steel scrap include namely
• Baling
• Briquetting
• Shearing
• Shredding
Some of the most important parts of demolition are the dismantling services. Through these, large parts of a building are taken apart, broken down, and possible recycled. Dismantling is crucial because there are several structures in a building that are either dangerous or difficult to simply bulldoze or destroy.
We buy/sell the following items:
Used oil re-refining is the process of restoring used oil to new oil by removing chemical impurities, heavy metals and dirt. Used industrial and automotive oil is recycled at re-refineries. The oil that is produced in this step is referred to as re-refined base oil (RRBL).