Edmonton opens building-waste recycling plant

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Caption: A claw loads demolition waste onto a conveyor belt. The material will be sorted and recycled. (CBC)

Edmonton is hoping to recycle up to 70 per cent more construction and demolition waste with the opening of a $4.3 million recycling facility(external link) at the Edmonton Waste Management Centre(external link).
The $4.3 million facility uses mechanical and manual sorting to separate loads of mixed material into various re-usable commodities.

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Caption: Much of the waste is sorted by hand. (CBC)

Construction and demolition waste makes up about one quarter of all municipal solid waste sent to landfills in Alberta, according to Alberta Environment.
It's estimated only 10 to 15 per cent of such waste is currently recycled in Alberta, said the city.
The recycling facility can process 100,000 tonnes of mixed construction and demolition material per year.
The facility is expected to recover up to 70 per cent of the material for recycling.
To qualify as a mixed load, at least 75 per cent of an individual load must be made up of wood, metal, drywall, asphalt/concrete, asphalt shingles, cardboard and paper.
The 2012 rate for mixed construction and demolition loads at the EWMC is $60 per tonne versus $75 per tonne for other commercial waste.