Geotechnics (Nov 2021)

The Use of Recycled and Secondary Aggregates to Achieve a Circular Economy within Geotechnical Engineering

  • Lisa Perkins,
  • Alexander C. D. Royal,
  • Ian Jefferson,
  • Colin D. Hills

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/geotechnics1020020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
pp. 416 – 438

Abstract

Read online

The construction industry’s current dependence on primary aggregates is unsustainable as these are non-renewable resources and the consumption of these materials has a high environmental impact. The global annual production of primary aggregates is estimated to be 50 billion tonnes. In Europe, where 2 billion tonnes of primary aggregates are produced annually, approximately 90% of aggregates are utilised by the construction industry, whilst over 1 Gt of waste are sent to landfill; in the UK, 44% of landfilled waste arises from the construction industry. The drive to adopt a circular economy necessitates changes in resource use (including non-renewable aggregates). Recycling wastes, such as aggregates, could help this situation; whilst this concept is not new, it does not appear to have been widely embraced in geotechnical engineering. The aim of this paper is to highlight the benefits of increasing the use of alternative aggregates as this would enable the reserves of primary aggregates to be better maintained and less material would be landfilled—a win-win situation and a contributing step towards developing a truly circular economy.

Keywords