Third aluminium can capture grant awarded

aluminium

Ardagh Metal Packaging and Crown Holdings funded a new aluminium can capture grant awarded to a recycling facility northeast of Orlando that will install additional can capture equipment as part of a larger facility upgrade.

Once installed at GEL Recycling’s Port Orange, FL, material recovery facility (MRF), this equipment will result in nearly 3.5 million more beverage cans captured at the facility that were previously mis-sorted.

The GEL facility is the third MRF to receive funding from a grant program facilitated by Can Manufacturers Institute (CMI). 

CMI partnered with The Recycling Partnership to evaluate and select the grantees, execute the grant program and provide technical assistance to ensure successful implementation.

The grant program builds off the CMI research released last year that found it is critical to capture all used beverage cans (UBC) flowing through MRFs, which play the vital role of sorting single stream recyclables. 

This research concluded that most MRFs in the United States would not be able to operate without the revenue from UBCs considering they are consistently the most valuable beverage package material in the recycling stream. 

Capturing more beverage cans means a healthier recycling system.

The grant funds provided to GEL Recycling will be used to purchase a metal detector addition to its optical sorter. The equipment will help eliminate UBCs from being mis-sorted to the plastic pile.

The facility is a dual-stream MRF processing 24,000 tons per year mostly from Volusia County on Florida’s northeast coast. It is undergoing a general upgrade and this grant ensures the MRF will have modern metal detection.

When the additional nearly 3.5 million cans are captured and recycled each year at this one MRF, it will generate more than $56,000 in new annual revenue and produce enough energy savings to power nearly 1.4 million homes for one hour. Further, the carbon dioxide equivalent emissions avoided each year will be the same as is generated from an average passenger vehicle driving 868,000 miles, which is the distance of driving from New York to San Francisco 300 times.

“The environmental and economic impact of recycling aluminium cans is astounding,” said CMI President Robert Budway. 

“Can manufacturers like Ardagh and Crown ultimately convert billions of used beverage cans into new cans each year, which is why the aluminium beverage can is the textbook example of the circular economy.

“These grants ensure millions more aluminium beverage cans complete the circular journey into new cans, which can happen infinitely since metal recycles forever.”

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