TITECH Technology installed at UPM Materials Recovery Facility
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TITECH Technology installed at UPM Materials Recovery Facility
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TITECH Technology installed at UPM Materials Recovery Facility
Veröffentlicht: 20.07.2011
Bereich: Papiersortierung
An estimated 13.2 million tonnes of paper and board products were consumed in the UK in 2008, with 67% of this paper recovered for recycling1. Currently recycling rates for paper within the UK are generally very good and are improving, yet there are issues with the quantity and quality of paper for reuse in paper mills.
Newsprint and board mills are the main users of recovered paper as
their products are produced from a very high percentage of recovered fibres. Newsprint
consumption within the UK has been falling due to the growth of other media
formats, yet production has increased. Accordingly the quantity of imports has
fallen. This in turn has led to a greater domestic demand for paper recovered
from the waste stream.
Materials recovery facilities (MRFs) have improved enormously in
recent years. In terms of paper and board products, MRFs can now achieve levels
of up to 70% recovery and contamination levels as low as 2-3%. However, the
majority of UK MRFs have been designed to consider the performance and
profitability across a number of material streams rather than focussing on one
stream, such as paper. This can lead to a dichotomy between what the reprocessing
industry is capable of producing and what is demanded in terms of quality and
quantity by some end users.
As a specialist paper manufacturer, UPM has experienced difficulties
in securing a consistent supply of high quality recycled fibre for use in its
paper mills. It therefore took the ground breaking decision to develop its own MRF
at UPM Shotton paper mill in North Wales.
Sorting Requirements
UPM is one of the UK’s largest recyclers of used newspapers and
magazines, reusing more than 3.2M tonnes per year in its graphic papers
production. UPM Shotton consumes approximately 640,000 tonnes of recovered
fibre to produce up to 500,000 tonnes of newsprint per year. Securing
sufficient recovered fibre of a consistently high quality is therefore vital to
its continued success.
David Green, Technical Director at UPM Shotton, explains: “We took the
strategic decision to develop our own MRF so that we had some degree of control
over the supply chain and the purity of the recovered fibre coming into the
paper mill. As far as we are aware, nothing like this has been tried before,
but to us it was the next logical step in securing the long-term future of our
business.”
The UPM Shotton MRF represents an investment of some £17 million and
will take in commingled waste from a number of sources to produce up to 120,000
tonnes of recovered fibre per year – around 20 per cent of UPM Shotton’s
requirements. However, UPM has set some ambitious recovery and purity targets:
they are aiming for a 99.9 per cent recovery rate and contamination levels of
under 1% for browns (cardboard) and around 1% for all other materials.
These targets far exceed anything that current MRFs are achieving, so UPM
took a number of steps to ensure that its new MRF would deliver these efficiencies.
”Our background is in process engineering, so the way we approached procurement
seemed logical to us, although it may be rather unusual to the waste management
industry,” says David Green.
Knowing what output material parameters were needed, UPM conducted
detailed market research to find out what could deliver the required quality of
recovered paper. The research included visiting reference sites throughout
Europe, Canada and the USA as well as conducting
a series of meetings with potential plant builders and equipment companies
prior to the formal tender process.
“By the time we came to the final tender process, it was clear which
companies had really understood what it was we were trying to achieve,” says
David Green.
Canadian company Machinex ultimately won the contract to build the
flagship MRF. Although not yet particularly well-known in the UK, Machinex has
established its position as a world leader in the industry. It has designed and
installed over 200 turnkey facilities in partnership with leading MRFs in
Canada, the United States and Northern Europe.
“We visited Machinex reference sites which were delivering close to
UPM expectations for paper recovery using traditional mechanical techniques,”
says David Green. “We were therefore confident that, with the addition of optical
sorting equipment, they would be able to achieve 90 per cent recovery of paper
and the required 99 per cent purity rates for the recovered fibre.”
Rather than accept a third party recommendation for optical sorting
systems, UPM undertook their own research for this aspect of the new MRF too. Having
reviewed a number of options, they concluded that TITECH sensor-based sorting
systems were the best available and specified that TITECH technology had to be
incorporated into the tender in order for it to be considered.
Adding Value
TITECH paper sorting systems differ significantly in their approach to
materials identification from many other options on the market. Most
paper sorting systems use an RGB camera for paper sorting, yet this process has
issues with separating materials effectively because it identifies only by
colour. This can lead to misidentification.
For example, when
paper and cardboard become damp their appearance can change significantly and
the camera can no longer distinguish between damp paper and dry cardboard,
which leads to contamination. TITECH systems use an optical sorting technique
known as NIR spectroscopy, which identifies specific materials by their
physical properties, making the wetness of the paper immaterial and
significantly improving accuracy.
“We were very
impressed with what we had heard about TITECH systems, but we subjected them to
the same scrutiny as everyone else,” says David Green. “Having obtained
detailed technical data and seen TITECH systems in action, we were convinced
that they would be critical to achieving the recovery rates and purity levels
that our paper process demanded.”
Ten TITECH systems have
been installed at UPM Shotton plus a sensor-only unit for quality control. Six systems are dedicated to maximising the
recovery and purity of the paper line, while a further four TITECH systems are
used to target plastics for recovery. Materials entering the MRF follow a
relatively straightforward recovery process, as follows:
1)
Large and 3D items are removed
and grading occurs using a mixture of mechanical and screening techniques.
2)
The materials then pass
under four TITECH systems in sequence, which remove browns and other
contaminants from the paper line.
3)
A further optical sorting system
then screens the non-paper line to recover any paper that has been pulled off
with other materials. This is fed back into the paper line.
4)
A final pass under the
sixth TITECH system then sorts the smaller items such as envelopes.
Quality control is
an essential part of the UPM Shotton MRF process, as David Green explains: “The MRF has been built
adjacent to the recovered paper warehouse which makes it logistically very
efficient. However, strict controls are required to make sure that nothing coming
in from the MRF side can compromise the high quality end product.”
Once the paper has
been automatically sorted, it passes through a handpicking section for visual
checking. As a final check, a TITECH sensor unit is positioned on the conveyor
that takes the recovered paper through to the paper mill. This does not extract
anything, but acts purely as a quality control unit and prevents any paper with
unacceptable levels of contamination passing through to the paper processing
side.
Because the recovered paper is fed into the paper mill directly, there
is no need to store it. This increases the potential storage capacity for input
materials for the MRF and allows the plant to operate 24/7.
As well as providing the mill with a secure supply of recovered fibre,
the UPM Shotton MRF supports UPM’s zero waste to landfill policy. It will also
provide an additional revenue stream through the recovery of other materials
besides paper. There is an emphasis on quality here too, with UPM aiming to supply
recyclers with secondary materials, such as plastic, that require no further
reprocessing.
Commenting on behalf of TITECH, Brian Gist says: “The UPM Shotton MRF
has been an extremely interesting project to work on and the waste management
industry could learn some important lessons from UPM – not just in terms of
what is achievable with modern automated sorting techniques, but also in considering
their approach to procurement and project management.
“UPM is setting a new benchmark for paper recovery and we are
delighted that TITECH systems have been recognised as an integral part of their
ambition to recover more than 90 per cent of paper and achieve unrivalled
levels of purity.”
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