WASTE RECYCLING
Recycling UK provide expert advice for the reuse sector
RECYCLING UK is one of the largest independent recycling companies in the United Kingdom. From their head offi ce at Tarporley, Cheshire, and their associate processing plants throughout the UK and Ireland they can cover most recycling needs. The company also have offi ce/joint ventures in Mumbai, India, and Waterford, Ireland. The UK-wide and international recycling fi rm are traders of all grades of waste paper and plastic in the form of bulk loose, baled or palletised material, surplus or damaged reels and redundant stock of paper and plastic packaging, supplying the UK, Europe, India and throughout Asia. Dedicated commercial, logistics and admin departments look after every aspect of the collection and delivery of material purchased. The commercial team can provide expert advice on all aspects of recycling and waste management, along with the sale of materials generated worldwide on a spot order basis, or more formal long-term agreements – always with fast and competitive payment terms. The wholly-owned subsidiary, OWP Ltd, processes over 1,500 tonnes per week at
a dedicated plant at Oswestry situated on the England-Wales border with material collected by various means within a 150-mile radius. They also collect material throughout the UK and Ireland using trailers for delivery to Oswestry or to one of their associate processing plants. Recycling UK are licensed as Brokers of Controlled Waste by the UK
Environment Agency, TFS/Dublin City Council in Ireland, Northern Ireland Environment Agency, and registered with NIWO in the Netherlands. The company is an active member of the Cheshire and North Wales Chamber of Commerce, The Recycling Association and CPI Recovered Paper Sector.
www.rukgroup.com
Waste-to-Energy specialists introduce cutting edge technology into the UK
MACCLESFIELD-based Tidy Planet is bringing the latest Waste-to-Energy boiler technology, the Artificial Vision System (AVS), to the UK business landscape. Food waste experts Tidy Planet’s partnership with Valencian-headquartered Sugimat as sole distributor of the industry- leading boilers was announced earlier in the year. The next chapter is to see the fi rm unveil the new intelligent boiler monitoring and control system here. With 40 years’ experience in the energy- generation arena, Sugimat’s new AVS made an inaugural appearance at Valencia’s FIMMA-Maderalia fair in February this year. The intuitive camera-driven equipment is located in the biomass system, and continuously monitors the fi re in the boiler by observing the fl ame – to regulate air fl ow, grate movement and fuel feed. This enhances the environment for maximum heat output and fuel efficiency, as well as reducing emissions. The boiler has been designed and
38 SHWM November, 2018
engineered to optimise the combustion process – a similar technology to what is used in automotive firm TESLA’s newly developed heaters. James Tyler, director at Tidy Planet, commented: “With an accelerated demand for biomass boilers, technology that not only monitors but optimises combustion conditions, enables organisations to reap a wealth of benefi ts – especially where the use of variable feedstocks and reduced operator costs are concerned. “The AVS’s constant boiler supervision and regulation works to improve the effi ciency of non-homogeneous fuels by up to 10% – as well as incrementally reducing emissions and the need for human intervention. “This enables companies to generate more energy, reduce labour and eliminate any wastage from the fuel that they are putting in – which are obvious environmental and fi nancial advantages.”
The technology can be retrofi tted to Sugimat’s range of boilers and added on to other boiler brands. This enables sites
with troublesome fuels – where clean and effi cient combustion is diffi cult to achieve – the opportunity to experience the same signifi cant benefi ts. Sugimat’s business development director Alex Mas added: “The computerised AVS is smart and self-suffi cient, using real-world image-processing tech to act as a human eye during the combustion process. “As the equipment can anticipate, localise and rectify potential faults, less human interaction is required for maintenance – increasing both the machine’s up-time and a business’s bottom line.”
www.skiphiremagazine.co.uk
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