Measuring circular economy through life cycle assessment – challenges and recommendations based on a study on recycling of Al dross, bottom ash and shavings

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
E Pastor-Vallés A Vallejo-Olivares G Tranell J B. Pettersen
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
12
File Size:
1175 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 21, 2024

Abstract

Metals are essential for the sustainability transition and decarbonisation of society. Yet, it will be paramount to produce them sustainably and minimise the affiliated resource and energy use and the associated emissions. In the circular economy, the metallurgical industry should recycle existing material stocks, and improve its utilisation of wastes, residues and side streams. This increases the complexity of processes, as they become both (often multi-fraction) waste treatment as well as material production processes and brings complexity to the assessment of environmental benefits. Assessing the environmental impact of technological developments frequently is supported by life cycle assessment (LCA). While the method is well documented, its implementation involves several methodological choices that deserve reasoning and analysis, such as how to define the product when former wastes are turned into new products, the selection of impact methodology when converting emissions to environmental indicators, the definition of system boundaries and co-product allocation and the interpretation of sensitivity and uncertainty in final outcomes. In this exploratory study, we investigate how the variation of LCA set-up affects the environmental burden of the system. We consider a metallurgical process where a mix of hard-to-recycle aluminium-containing streams is used to produce aluminium cast alloys in a rotary furnace. Remelting with salt-fluxes allows recovering metals from partly oxidised/contaminated streams, such as dross, bottom ash and industrial shavings, but at the expense of generating significant amounts of salt-slag/salt-cake hazardous waste. The study considers different system alternatives such as landfilling the salt-slag residues versus valourising them into salts, aluminium concentrates, ammonium sulfate and non-metallic-compounds to be used by the metallurgical, construction or chemical industries. Practical recommendations are outlined to facilitate the implementation of LCA in assessing the potential benefits of the circular economy in the metallurgical sector.
Citation

APA: E Pastor-Vallés A Vallejo-Olivares G Tranell J B. Pettersen  (2024)  Measuring circular economy through life cycle assessment – challenges and recommendations based on a study on recycling of Al dross, bottom ash and shavings

MLA: E Pastor-Vallés A Vallejo-Olivares G Tranell J B. Pettersen Measuring circular economy through life cycle assessment – challenges and recommendations based on a study on recycling of Al dross, bottom ash and shavings. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2024.

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