Heidelberg Materials has commissioned an innovative recycling plant for selective separation at its production site near Katowice, Poland.
The first-of-its-kind facility features a proprietary crushing mechanism that enables sophisticated separation and sorting capabilities to fully recycle demolition concrete and substitute virgin materials in concrete production. With a capacity of up to 100 tonnes of concrete per hour, Heidelberg Materials is the first company in the industry to introduce high-quality, selective concrete separation at this scale.
As part of the company’s patented ReConcrete process, demolition concrete is broken down into its original constituents through a newly designed, proprietary crushing mechanism. The fractions obtained include sand and gravel of the highest quality, equivalent to the one of virgin raw materials. Recycled concrete paste (RCP) is the finest fraction of the separation process: It can be either used as an alternative raw material for clinker production replacing limestone and reducing CO₂ emissions or as a secondary cementitious material.
In addition, RCP can act as a carbon sink, absorbing and permanently binding CO₂ over the entire lifespan of an infrastructure or building project. To make use of this potential and initiate what is known as “enforced carbonation”, the RCP can also be exposed to raw exhaust gases from cement production. The resulting carbonated RCP (cRCP) has the potential to mineralise about 150 kg CO₂ per tonne of RCP, significantly reducing CO₂ process emissions caused by carbon-intensive clinker production. At the same time, the cRCP can be used as a low-carbon cementitious material by reducing the amount of clinker necessary.
To further explore this technology, Heidelberg Materials is currently building an industrial pilot facility for enforced carbonation at its cement plant in Górażdże, Poland. The RCP obtained at the recycling plant near Katowice will be transported to the pilot facility in Górażdże, where it will be exposed to the exhaust gases from the kiln. Mechanical completion of the facility is expected by the end of 2024.
In order to meet the growing demand for sustainable building materials, Heidelberg Materials is continuously investing in infrastructure and technologies that pave the way to a circular economy as part of its portfolio optimisation. The company recently announced the acquisition of B&A Group, one of the leading construction soil and aggregates recycling companies in South West England specialised in the supply of recycled and primary aggregates as well as site clearance, earthworks, land remediation, and sustainable land regeneration. Other acquisitions in the field of recycling include Mick George Group (UK), Highway Materials, Aaron Materials, Green Drop Rock Products and RMS Gravel Inc. (all in the US) as well as RWG and SER Group (both in Germany), which help further expand the company’s presence in core markets while strengthening its range of circular materials.