Environmental Resource Protection through
Material Recovery

Recovery of Bottom Ash,
HCL, Gypsum, Ferrous and Non Ferrous Metals.
The Importance of Material Recovery:
Below graphics show the Greenhouse effect comparing
land filling, ATR (WTE) and MBT: The higher the
production and utilization of energy and end products the higher the
environmental relevance: kg- CO2- equivalent/ t residual waste:

Landfilling
ATR
MBT
©WRSI/BASF
This diagram is taken from
the
BASF Study “Eco - efficiency analysis -
BASF”. It clearly shows that ATR
(Advanced Thermal Recycling) by simply turning the waste into reusable
end-products (without even considering the energy recovered) has a
greater positive impact on GHG reduction than land filling with energy
recovery. In the original ATR is shown as WTE.
ATR is the most advanced, state of the art proven
technology that developed out of the WTE concept.
During the process of turning waste into energy 99% of the MSW is
transformed into commercial end products. The products produced through
the GCS proposed process include ferrous and non-ferrous metals for
recycling, hydrochloric acid @ 30% or higher, gypsum more pure than
mined gypsum, mixed salts and bottom ash for numerous construction
applications. The result is an incredibly clean Thermal Recycling
process.
Bottom Ash:

Schlacke & Schrott: Distribution
Center for Bottom Ash and Metals ©WRSI/HSK

Bottom Ash Aging Hall (3 months)
©WRSI/HSK

Bottom Ash up close
©WRSI/HSK

Samples of Bottom Ash by Size (for different
applications) ©WRSI/HSK

Road Construction with Bottom Ash (Bearing
Layer) ©WRSI/HSK

450,000 metric tons serve as the Bearing Layer
for most modern Container Terminal in the World with an annual
throughput of 3 million+ TEUs ©WRSI/HSK

Bottom Ash used as Bearing Layer for Shopping
Mall ©WRSI/HSK

Bottom Ash – A Safe Product for the
Construction Industry ©WRSI/HSK
Bottom Ash just a Dream? By Dr. Heiner Zwahr:
In the Hamburg area, more than 200,000 tons of bottom ash are
recycled annually as construction material. It is important though to
treat bottom ash properly to obtain a marketable product. Chemical
properties and constructional characteristics have to comply with
environmental and constructional
standards or guidelines if bottom ash is to be used beneficially. New
developments are underway to broaden the fields of application for
treated bottom ash and to improve the economics of recycling bottom ash.
This will be a further step in the development of waste to energy as
part of a sustainable waste management.
Read Entire Paper,
click here.



HCL Production:
