january 14 – 16, 2007 ● san antonio, texas

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January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas Shingles Recycling: CMRA’s Best Practices Guide A presentation at the CMRA Annual Meeting On Sunday, January 14, 2007

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Shingles Recycling:. CMRA’s Best Practices Guide. A presentation at the CMRA Annual Meeting On Sunday, January 14, 2007. January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas. Definitions. Manufacturers’ Asphalt Shingle Scrap Tear-Off Asphalt Shingle Scrap - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Shingles Recycling:CMRA’s Best Practices Guide

A presentation at theCMRA Annual Meeting

On Sunday, January 14, 2007

Page 2: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Definitions

• Manufacturers’ Asphalt Shingle Scrap

• Tear-Off Asphalt Shingle Scrap

• Recycled Asphalt Shingles (RAS)(Crushed & screened)

Page 3: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Comprehensive Quality Control Plan

Quality control of supply

(Must comply with NESHAP*)

Worker safety and health protection

Final product quality, storage and handling

Shingle recycling system design

Final product sampling and lab testing

Page 4: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

“Best Practices Guide”

• Markets first (especially HMA)

• RAS product specifications

• Processing guidelines

• Worker health and safety

• Sourcing *

• Overall system design

Page 5: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Key Barriers

• Lack of clear industry standards and specifications

• Inconsistent state regulations

• Lack of adequate information / technology transfer

• Lack of national leadership by private industry and government

Page 6: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Acknowledgments

• Sean Anestis, Roof Top Recycling

• Ken Snow, Recycle America Enterprises

• John Adelman, Commercial Paving & Recycling Systems

• Ron Sines, PJ Keating

Page 7: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Acknowledgements(continued in the midwest)

• Dusty Ordorff, Bituminous Roadways

• Jim Omann, Omann Brothers

• Roger Brown, Pace Construction

• Joe Schroer, MoDOT

• Mn/DOT

• NAPA

Page 8: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

CMRA’s Web Site

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New Jersey DOT Asphalt Cement Price Index

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

$400

J-90 J-91 J-92 J-93 J-94 J-95 J-96 J-97 J-98 J-99 J-00 J-01 J-02 J-03 J-04 J-05 J-06

Month (as of June 1 each year)

$ p

er t

on (

En

glis

h)

Page 63: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Multiple Applications• Hot mix asphalt (HMA)

• Aggregate / gravel

• Dust control

• Cold patch

• Ground cover

• Fuel (e.g., cement kilns)

• New shingles

Page 64: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Factors Affecting HMA Performance

• Aggregate gradation of RAS

• Properties of final blended binder content within the HMA as affected by:

– RAS asphalt binder

– Virgin binder

Page 65: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Factors AffectingHMA Performance (continued)

• Location RAS is incorporated into HMA drum

• Temperature

• Moisture content of RAS and other aggregates

• Retention time in HMA drum

Page 66: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Potential Benefits

• Rutting resistance (especially at warmer temperatures)

• Conservation of landfill space

• Economic savings to HMA producer due to reduced need for virgin asphalt binder (add oil)

Page 67: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Potential Disadvantages

• Contamination (tear-offs)

• Added costs of processing and use in HMA

• Increased low-temperature / fatigue cracking

Page 68: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Mitigating Low Temperature Impacts of RAS

• Use less RAS instead of 5%(e.g., use 2% to 3%)

• Adjust the virgin binder PG to one grade softer (e.g., PG 52-34)

• Assure minimum amount of virgin binder (regardless of PG)

Page 69: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Engineering Design Philosophy

• Manufacturing a high quality product

• Not just recycling a waste material

• Long-term sustainability

Page 70: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Deleterious Material• Nails

• Other metal

• Wood

• Cellophane

• Other plastic

• Paper

• Fiber board

Page 71: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Two Sourcing Alternatives

• Source separation (at the job site)

• Central processing(at the shingle recycling facility)

Page 72: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Pre-Sorting

• Inspections prior to any grinding

• Manual removal of any large items

• Elevated sorting platform

Page 73: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Require Certification

• Require written “chain-of-custody” certifications

• Develop pre-approved customer list of certified suppliers

• Maintain permanent file of all supply certifications

Page 74: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Grinding Equipment Vendors

• Examine designs dedicated to shingles

• Get customer references and then ask the questions about actual operating performance

• Plan for adequate maintenance

Page 75: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Ayres, April 2004

Page 76: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Dust Control

• Comprehensive plan• Spray with optimum amounts of water at

critical grinding stages• Shrouds• Negative air (i.e., suction) systems to

remove ambient dust and light debris• Standard employee health and safety

protection equipment and procedures

Page 77: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Removal of Nails and Other Ferrous

• Assure an even layer of material on conveyor belts equipped with magnets

• Multiple magnets (minimum of three or four)• Use combination of pulley belt and overhead

magnets• Combine metal detection device with manual

hand sorting for final quality control process

Page 78: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Final Product Quality

• Conduct adequate testing

• Provide quality guarantees

• Keep covered to reduce unwanted moisture

• Metered pre-blending with bituminous aggregate or RAP to reduce reagglomeration

Page 79: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Final Product Preparation

• If stockpiled, pulverization of final product may be necessary immediately prior to use in HMA plant

• Alternatively, use RAS “fresh” about one week after production to avoid extended stockpiling

Page 80: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

RAS Tests

• Gradation

• Asphalt content

• Asphalt cement (AC) performance grade (PG)

• Debris

• Moisture

Page 81: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Quality Specs: Scrap Feedstock and

Final Products

• Free of debris / trash / foreign matter

• Tear-off scrap must be asphalt shingles only

• No nails!

Page 82: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Economics

• Tipping fees

• Value of final product

Page 83: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Business Models

• Mobile and stationary

• Multiple products

• Integrate with existing RAP and aggregate production infrastructures

Page 84: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Multiple Products(Beyond RAS)

• Clean wood for mulch

• Clean wood and other organic wastes for biomass fuel

• Gypsum (sheetrock) for land application

• Metals for recycling

Page 85: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Regulatory Compliance

• Pro-active, assertive planning

• Anticipate requirements

• Use precedents to your advantage

• Document adequate market demand to avoid “speculative stockpiling”

Page 86: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Siting

• Optimize location of tear-off shingles processing facility

• Consider location of competing landfills and transfer stations

• Consider location of HMA plants

Page 87: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Additional National Developments

• New AASHTO specification

• EPA / CMRA study

• www.ShingleRecycling.org

• Asbestos data base

Page 88: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

AASHTO Specification (continued)

• Deleterious material maximum limits (Section 8):(material retained on the No. 4 sieve)

– Heavy fraction = 0.50%

– Lightweight fraction = 0.05%

Page 89: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Missouri Shingle Spec• Extrinsic Material Allowance Raised

– 3.0% Total– 1.5% Wood

Page 90: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

AASHTO Specification (continued) Asbestos levels:

“…shall be certified to be asbestos free.” (Section 5.2)

“(Tear-off shingles are) construction debris and various state and local regulations may be applicable to its use. The user of this specification is advised to contact state and local transportation departments and environmental agencies to determine what additional requirements may be necessary.” (Note 2)

Page 91: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Asbestos Risk

• Incidence of asbestos is extremely low

• Average content was only:

– 0.02% in 1963

– 0.00016% in 1973

NAHB, 1999

Page 92: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

ASRAS Data

• Iowa (1,791 samples), no hits

• Maine (118 samples), no hits

• Mass:– (2,288 composite samples) 11 hits < 1%– (69 tarpaper samples) 2 < 5%– (109 ground RAS samples) 2 < 1%

• Florida (287 samples), 2 hits > 1%

Ruesch, April 2003.

Page 93: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

ASRAS Data(continued)

• Missouri (6 samples), no hits• Hawaii (100 samples), 1 hit > 1%• Minnesota (156 samples), no hits• Minnesota (50 tarpaper), 1 hit @ 2% - 5%

We still want more data!

(for EPA / CMRA project.)

Ruesch, April 2003.

Page 94: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

DKA / AESAirborne Fiber Tests

As part of the RMRC Project:

Environmental Testing of Airborne Particles atThe Shingle Processing Plant

Krivit, April 2003.

Page 95: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Summary Highlights

• Risk from asbestos is negligible to non-existent

• Two rounds of sampling for total:– Dust (1999)– Fibers (2002)

• Common sense and best management practices can help prevent employee exposure

Krivit, April 2003.

Page 96: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Asbestos Testing

• Explore exemption alternative, but if not, then …..

• ….develop product sampling plan• ….develop supply sampling plan on

whole shingles / mixed roofing scrap• Recognize that more initial testing may

be needed to gather adequate baseline data

Page 97: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Additional Environmental Risks

• Air emissions impacts from tear-off RAS in HMA plants

• PAH and other particulates

• Run-off from whole shingles and RAS stockpiles

• Run-off from RAS use as ground cover or dust control (in 100% form)

Page 98: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

Recommendations

1. Continue MARKET DEVELOPMENT (a)

2. MANAGE the asbestos issue (b)

3. PROTECT employee health and safety (c)

4. GUARANTEE your product quality (d)

Page 99: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

CMRA’s Web Site

Page 100: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas
Page 101: January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

January 14 – 16, 2007 ● San Antonio, Texas

651-489-4990

Dan Krivit and Associates

[email protected]