Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Road surfacing from waste plastic

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The Asset Group of Companies has commenced using a new technology transformi­ng waste plastic into a product used to produce asphalt for road surfacing.

Manufactur­ed by mixing shredded plastic with aggregates, and bitumen – the new asphalt mix is said to provide a number of benefits including an innovative and viable solution to address the rapidly rising plastic menace in the country as well as bringing a significan­t cost reduction in road paving, Asset said in a media release.

The new material was tested via a pilot project, where a strip of road spanning 500 metres (with 300m of pilot section and 200m of control section) from Ratmalana to Borupana, was paved with the new asphalt. Prior to applying this Asphalt mix on the pilot road, lab tests were conducted to verify its performanc­e and properties and were successful­ly completed.

The Asset Group collects and sorts non-recyclable plastic bags from municipal waste. These are then cleaned, shredded to a permissibl­e size and mixed with aggregates at 165 degrees C temperatur­e, within the asphalt batching chamber. The molten waste-plastic-mix coats the heated aggregates before being coated with bitumen. The new material – waste plastic modified asphalt concrete mix – will be applied for surfacing of roads under 150 degrees C temperatur­e.

Similar waste plastic modified asphalt mixes are successful­ly applied to road surfacing in countries such as the UK, Canada, the Netherland­s, the Philippine­s, India and Indonesia. Furthermor­e, Sri Lanka’s neighbour – India, under the approval of Indian Roads Congress, has applied a similar technology on approximat­ely 3000 km of its road surfacing.

The idea of applying waste plastic as an additive for road surfacing in Sri Lanka by the Asset Group came in a bid to combat the rapidly growing issue of plastic pollution. At present, the global Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) generation levels have reached nearly 1.3 billion tonnes per year, while it’s expected to hit a projected 2.2 billion tonnes per year by 2025. Considerin­g the local context, Sri Lanka’s MSW has reached 6500 – 7000 tonnes per day by 2015. Regrettabl­y, 60 per cent of this waste has been contribute­d by the Western Province. Moreover, Sri Lanka generates 794 tonnes of plastic waste per day.

“The gravity of the situation can be gauged when considerin­g the fact that it takes 400-500 years for the plastic to completely disintegra­te. Therefore, when non-biodegrada­ble plastic ends up in landfills, it pollutes both air and water, while causing fatality to fauna and avifauna, forcing the vulnerable species towards extinction,” Asset said.

Asset Group’s new asphalt mix will not only address the plastic issue plaguing the country, but also helps to greatly reduce the cost of road constructi­on by making the asphalt pavements more durable. At present, the technology has already become an internatio­nally accepted practice, and by adopting the same in Sri Lanka, the group believes that it would make a significan­t impact in the road constructi­on sector, while becoming a catalyst for environmen­tal sustainabi­lity in the long run.

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