Displaying items by tag: Belarus
Belarus: Krasnoselskstroymaterialy has announced that its US$7.8m refuse-derived fuel (RDF) plant at its 1.6Mt/yr Krasnoselskstroymaterialy plant will be completed in September 2020. The plant is installed with equipment worth US$4.5m from Czech suppliers. The Ministry of Construction and Architecture has said that waste from the Grodno Recycling and Mechanical Sorting Plant will replace Belarusian peat and Russian coal as the cement fuel in the plant’s kilns, fulfilling Krasnoselskstroymaterialy’s goals of renewability and national self-reliance.
Ministry of Construction and Architecture energy conservation head Sergey Nikitin said, “The transition to RDF will create an opportunity to reduce the cost of cement production in the future, strengthen the financial and economic situation of the Krasnoselskstroymaterialy enterprise and create additional competitive advantages over producers operating on traditional fossil fuels.”
Entsorga working on projects in US, Belarus and Hungary
02 April 2019Belarus/Hungary/US: Italy’s Entsorga is working on alternative fuel projects for cement plants in the US, Belarus and Hungary. In the US it has signed a contract to supply a Pelican feed line at Argos Cement’s Martinsburg plant in West Virginia. It follows a long-term off take agreement in place with the cement producer to supply alternative fuels. The 60,000t/yr feed station is similar to a feed station already delivered in 2016 in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.
In Belarus the waste engineering company plans to install an alternative fuel feed line at the Krasno cement plant. Local subsidiary EntsorgaFin will define the material acceptance standards and provide the design for the fuel feed station and feed line.
In Hungary Entsorga was awarded a contract for the supply of an alternative fuels automated handling and feeding system in January 2019 with an unnamed global cement producer. It will provide its Spider and Pelican products to the end user. Commissioning of the plant is scheduled for early 2020.
Belarus: The Council of Ministers of Belarus has approved the creation of a plan for the production of alternative fuels from municipal solid waste (MSW) and its use in the country. The aim is to expand the scope of use of municipal solid waste and its conversion into refuse derived fuel (RDF) including usage at cement plants.
The project aims to replace imported coal and natural gas with RDF levels of up to 330,000t for use by cement kilns. This will require around 1.1Mt of MSW or 26% of the country’s supply. In order to do this it has been recommended that new MSW sorting facilities should be set up and the existing ones should be retrofitted to produce raw materials for RDF.
The works will be implemented in two phases. Under the first phase (2016 - 2017), two facilities for the production of RDF will be set up in Krichev to supply Krichevcementnoshifer and Belarusian Cement Plant and one in Krasnoselsk for the Krasnoselskstroymaterialy company. In addition the fuel supply systems will need to be upgraded at the cement plants, production of raw material for RDF will be organised at the existing waste treatment plants in Brest, Mogilev, Gomel, Baranovichi and a waste sorting plant that is under construction in Grodno.
The cost of the first phase is estimated at Euro227m. Under the second phase (2017 - 2020), the output of raw materials for the production of RDF will be increased. In particular, inter-regional sorting plants should be built in Bobruisk, Vawkavysk, Zhlobin, Krichev, Lida, recycling plants should be built in Vitebsk and Orsha, a waste treatment plant should be reconstructed in Gomel. The cost of the second phase totals Euro118m. If this plan is implemented in full, the overall level of waste utilisation will be approximately 27% in 2020.
Belarus: Belarusian manufacturers are expected to export 1.8Mt of cement in 2015, including 1.3Mt to be supplied to Russia's Eurocement, according to Construction minister Anatol Chorny. Belarus sold 980,000t of cement to Eurocement in 2014. Belarus' cement output is expected to total 6.1Mt in 2015, up from 5.8Mt in 2014.
"This year we have signed an exclusive contract for the supply of 1.3Mt," said Chorny. "The contract is advantageous to Belarus because 50% of the total amount shall be paid in advance and the rest shall be paid within 10 days of the delivery date. If the price of cement in the Russian market is lower than in Belarus, the Russian company will cover the losses. If the price will be higher, the difference will be equally divided." Belarus will also export cement to Russia's Kaliningrad exclave, Poland and Lithuania in 2015.
Belarus' AAT Krychawtsementnashyfer in Krychaw, Mahilyow, operated at a loss in 2013. This was caused by its old production plant, which still uses natural gas to manufacture cement. In contrast, the company's new production facility generated a profit of about Euro676,000 in 2014. To reduce the cost of cement production, Krychawtsementnashyfer installed a cement kiln fuelled by waste tyres in 2014 and plans to start using coal dust as a fuel in 2015, according to Chorny.