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Recycling of Asphalt Pavement

Environmental
Issues of Poor Road Conditions | Recycling
of Asphalt Pavement | Asphalt Recycling
Facts and Report Card
Much
has changed since the nation’s
first Earth Day in April 1970. Americans are now recycling
28 percent of
products in the municipal solid waste stream. For some
industrial products, the recycling rate is much higher, and
reclaimed
asphalt pavement leads all at 80 percent.
In fact, the hot
mix asphalt industry recycles approximately twice the tonnage
of asphalt pavement as the amount of recycled paper, glass,
plastic and aluminum combined.
How it works
The Federal Highway Administration estimates
that 91 million metric tons (100.1 million tons) of asphalt
pavement are
scraped or “milled” off roads during resurfacing
and widening projects each year. Of that, 73 million metric
tons (80.3 million tons) are reclaimed and reused as part
of the nation’s roads, roadbeds, shoulders and embankments.
For road surfaces, studies have determined that mixes containing
10 percent to 25 percent of reclaimed asphalt pavement have
performed well in numerous states. Even higher percentages
have been used successfully in lower layers.
Additionally, engineers have determined
that that the asphalt pavement industry can make economical
use of other waste
products – such as old tires, factory-reject roofing
shingles, slag aggregate from steel production and sand from
metal-casting foundries – to make asphalt pavement.
Major advantages
Recycling asphalt pavement makes both
environmental and economic sense. Reclaimed asphalt pavement
constitutes a “treasure
trove” of pre-processed road-building materials. The
use of recycled asphalt pavement has grown widely, reducing
the use of virgin materials and helping to preserve landfill
space. Highway agencies and taxpayers benefit because recycling
stretches tax dollars, allowing more roads to be kept in
better condition.
Recycling Facts
Source: Asphalt Pavement Alliance
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