Significant Additional Metal Recovery from Ash at Waste-to-Energy Facilities Documented

Published: Nov 8, 2016 19:04
Of the nearly 30 million tons of municipal solid waste processed by WTE facilities in the U.S. each year, about 7 million tons is left as bottom ash, non-combustible materials and solids from the air

By Waste Advantage

ScrapMonster Contributor

SEATTLE (Waste Advantage): The benefit of two new and innovative practices in managing ash from waste-to-energy (WTE) facilities has been documented in a recent report issued by SWANA’s Applied Research Foundation. These two new practices include enhanced recovery of a greater range of metals smaller than 12 millimeters (about 0.47 inches) from WTE bottom ash and the permitted reuse of bottom ash in road construction projects.

Of the nearly 30 million tons of municipal solid waste processed by WTE facilities in the U.S. each year, about 7 million tons is left as bottom ash, non-combustible materials and solids from the air pollution control systems (fly ash). That material is collectively referred to as WTE ash. Conventional metal recovery systems are often limited to processing of feedstock materials and large (greater than 12 millimeters) fragments in bottom ash. However, new systems being introduced in Europe have begun targeting the smaller fragments with a greater emphasis on bottom ash.

 “The issuance of this report demonstrates the important role that the SWANA Applied Research Foundation and its 45 subscribing organizations are playing in promoting innovation and sustainability in the management of municipal solid waste in North America” said Jeremy O’Brien, PE, SWANA’s Director of Applied Research.

The ARF report studied the implementation of one such approach by the Lancaster County Solid Waste Management Authority (LCSWMA) in Pennsylvania. The Authority signed a 10-year contract with Inashco North America, Inc., to use an Advanced Dry Recovery system to supplement existing in-line metal recovery systems. The system is expected to increase LCSWMA’s metals recovery from ash by 46 percent including greater recovery of ferrous, non-ferrous, and precious metals, and to provide additional revenues to LCSWMA over the contract period.

The ARF report also considered how the European model of managing bottom and fly ash separately could lead to greater recovery. Most U.S. WTE plants mix the two streams in order to manage them as a combined ash; as fly ash, managed individually, is considered a hazardous waste. It documented the efforts of Pasco County, FL, which changed its ash management approach to mix only enough bottom ash with fly ash—at a ratio of 25 percent bottom ash to 75 percent fly ash—to render the mixture non-hazardous. This new approach frees up 83 percent of the bottom ash to be reused as construction aggregates.

Following a successful pilot test program, the Pasco County Solid Waste Recovery Facility received the first permit ever issued by a state government authorizing the use of WTE bottom ash as an aggregate in road construction. The use of bottom ash in road construction would increase local diversion to almost 94 percent of the waste processed through Pasco County’s WTE facility from landfill disposal into recovery as energy or reusable materials and metals.

Courtesy: This article originally ran in the November 2016 issue of Waste Advantage Magazine. View

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM's internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or for more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
In the short term, ferrous commodities will continue to consolidate near the bottom [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
Jun 26, 2026 18:30
In the short term, ferrous commodities will continue to consolidate near the bottom [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
Read More
In the short term, ferrous commodities will continue to consolidate near the bottom [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
In the short term, ferrous commodities will continue to consolidate near the bottom [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
This week, ferrous metals fell continuously. During the week, there were many disturbances from unverified market rumors, but overall macro sentiment was weak, and expectations of rate hikes outside China continued to weigh on commodity sentiment. Earlier, rumors of a strike at BHP caused a slight rebound in iron ore; in the latter half of the week, Tangshan issued a notice on the "Tangshan Industrial Source Emission Reduction Plan for H2 2026," and combined with post-holiday inventory accumulation of the five major steel products, market sentiment was weak, and ferrous metals fell again. In the spot market, the off-season characteristics for end-users became more evident, market demand continued to weaken. While spot prices remained relatively firm, the spot-futures price spread widened somewhat, and positions in both futures and spot markets were unwound. Transactions were concluded at prices below market levels, further dragging down market prices......
Jun 26, 2026 18:30
Tin markets in and outside China showed a V-shaped trend intraday, as the most-traded SHFE tin contract dipped to 375,000 before rebounding in a volatile manner[[SMM Tin Futures Briefing]
Jun 26, 2026 15:35
Tin markets in and outside China showed a V-shaped trend intraday, as the most-traded SHFE tin contract dipped to 375,000 before rebounding in a volatile manner[[SMM Tin Futures Briefing]
Read More
Tin markets in and outside China showed a V-shaped trend intraday, as the most-traded SHFE tin contract dipped to 375,000 before rebounding in a volatile manner[[SMM Tin Futures Briefing]
Tin markets in and outside China showed a V-shaped trend intraday, as the most-traded SHFE tin contract dipped to 375,000 before rebounding in a volatile manner[[SMM Tin Futures Briefing]
[SMM Tin Futures Commentary: Tin markets in and outside China showed a V-shaped intraday trend, the most-traded SHFE tin contract tested a low of 375,000 and then fluctuated and rebounded]
Jun 26, 2026 15:35
Aluminum ADC12 Import Prices Drop, Domestic-Ex-China Gap Narrows to 2,300 Yuan/mt
Jun 26, 2026 13:27
Aluminum ADC12 Import Prices Drop, Domestic-Ex-China Gap Narrows to 2,300 Yuan/mt
Read More
Aluminum ADC12 Import Prices Drop, Domestic-Ex-China Gap Narrows to 2,300 Yuan/mt
Aluminum ADC12 Import Prices Drop, Domestic-Ex-China Gap Narrows to 2,300 Yuan/mt
[SMM aluminum flash] Current import ADC12 prices have pulled back to $3,230–$3,300/mt, and the domestic-ex-China inversion gap has narrowed to around 2,300 yuan/mt, the lowest level since mid-March. As prices outside China soften, import losses have recovered markedly from the earlier period. However, constrained by the still-large inversion, the import window remains closed. The willingness to bring in overseas resources is limited, and in the short term, their incremental supplement to domestic supply remains weak.
Jun 26, 2026 13:27