Displaying items by tag: Thailand
Tana Oy partners with GMC Engineering
23 October 2024Thailand: Finland-based environmental technology company Tana Oy has entered into a partnership with Thailand-based GMC Engineering, a waste management solutions company. This partnership enables GMC to distribute Tana Oy's recycling machines and landfill compactors across Thailand.
Saraburi cement plants to turn waste into energy
08 April 2024Thailand: Saraburi, which houses Thailand’s key cement plants, is expected to start converting waste to energy in a project led by the Thai Cement Manufacturers Association (TCMA). TCMA has developed a pilot project to create ‘ignitable waste pallets’, which will replace imported coal in cement production, according to TCMA chair Dr Chana Poomee. The process involves using waste from mining, cement plants and local communities to produce fuel, focusing on waste that cannot be reused or recycled.
Seven cement plants are located in the Tan Diao subdistrict due to its proximity to limestone mountains essential for cement production. The province is facing a growing waste management problem, owing to urbanisation and the expansion of agribusiness in the area. ‘Saraburi Sandbox’ project, a public-private-people partnership (PPP), seeks to address these issues.
Kittipong Promwong, president of the National Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation Office, believes the Saraburi Sandbox is crucial to the government's commitment to lowering CO₂ emissions.
Thai cement plant installs ThyssenKrupp Polysius' Prepol SC alternative fuels system
19 January 2023Thailand: ThyssenKrupp Polysius says that it has successfully supplied and installed a Prepol SC alternative fuels (AF) system at a 12Mt/yr cement plant in Thailand. The system will supply the plant's four lines with 4000t/day of AF.
ThyssenKrupp Polysius' Asia Pacific CEO Lukas Schoeneck said "Asia Pacific, with its tremendous municipal solid waste (MSW) problem, is ideal when it comes to replacing coal with AF. The Prepol SC technology significantly reduces the need to treat MSW before using the inherent calorific value. Additionally, it helps to further reduce the ambitious CO2 limit targets in the region."
Siam Cement Group increases alternative fuel use
27 July 2022Thailand: Siam Cement Group (SCG) increased its thermal substitution rate of alternative fuels (AF) to 31% in 2022, compared to 26% in 2021. In 2020 it reported an AF substitution rate of 18%.
Aumund Asia fulfils four Samson material feeder orders
16 September 2020Japan/Thailand: Aumund subsidiary Aumund Asia has installed a total of four Samson type 800 material feeders to waste management facilities in Japan’s Okinawa Region and Thailand’s Saraburi Province. The feeders have a capacity of 80t/hr and reduce dust emissions from handling and conveying operations thanks to their unique filter and enclosure.
Thailand: Siam Cement has engaged the US-based Dow to conduct a study of types of waste plastic suitable for sorting. Dow’s chief executive officer (CEO) Jim Fitterling has estimated that locally sourced pre-used plastics can supply a commercial renewable feedstock operation at a rate of 0.2 – 0.3Mt/yr. The Bangkok Post has reported that the scale on which the two companies would seek to expand any operations depend on volumes of available waste. Nikkei has reported that Thailand generates 1.03Mt/yr of plastic, over 3% of which passes into the World’s oceans.
Thailand: General Environmental Conservation (GENCO) plans to build a 100,000t/yr refuse-derived fuel (RDF) plant in Map Ta Phut, Rayong province. The project will have an investment of US$5.6m and will start production in the first quarter of 2017. RDF from the plant will be sold to cement plants, according to the Bangkok Post.
"GENCO will be the first company in Thailand to produce RDF to be sold to factories. The company will eventually increase its capacity to more than 100,000 tonnes to meet rising demand," said GENCO managing director Ronnachai Tantragoon.
Thailand: Executives from 50 administrative bodies in Nakhon Ratchasima Province have discussed how to dispose of 638,060t of accumulated garbage. A report on 'proper and practical methods' for disposal of the rubbish must be sent to the Office of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy and Planning by 30 July 2015.
The Comptroller-General's department has calculated that Nakhon Ratchasima will need US$6.19m in the 2016 fiscal year to dispose of the accumulated trash. Ranongrak Suwanchawee, president of the Nakhon Ratchasima Provincial Administrative Organisation, said that officials had agreed to transport and dispose of the garbage at a TPI Polene cement plant in Saraburi Province. This meant 29,000 trips to carry the trash in trucks plus the digging and levelling of a tip. The organisation has estimated that Nakhon Ratchasima would need a budget of about US$7.33m, slightly more than the department calculated.