California Company Hopes To Pave The World's Roads With Recycled Plastic

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Most single-use plastic items cannot be recycled and end up in landfills (Credit: Plasticfreechallenge.org)

The invention of plastic has been a double-edged sword for humanity. While the cheap, versatile material has made life convenient, it is virtually indestructible and takes centuries to decompose. Since avoiding plastic is impossible, companies worldwide are coming up with innovative ways to repurpose the millions of tons of polymer waste that end up in our landfills annually. Among the latest is California-based TechniSoil Industrial, which has devised an ingenious way to reuse plastic waste to repave roads.

Road resurfacing is an expensive undertaking that starts with using special equipment to extract and grind the topmost 3-to-6 inches of asphalt. Since the recycled material is not strong enough to use on its own, half of it is discarded and replaced with fresh hot asphalt. The combined product is mixed with bitumen — a sludge-like petroleum residue that acts as a binding agent — and relaid on the surface. Repaving a single lane mile requires 42 truckloads of new material and hauling out a similar amount of unusable waste.

TechniSoil's Neo binder replaces petroleum-based bitumen with repurposed plastic (Credit: TechnoSoil)

TechniSoil's process is both streamlined and sustainable. Four large construction vehicles work in unison to extract the top road layer, grind it for recycling, and mix it with the company's Neo binder — liquefied polymer made by chemically recycling discarded plastic bottles and other single-use containers. The blended product is instantly deposited back on the road, paved, and rolled over. Given that each lane mile requires the equivalent of 150,000 plastic water bottles, wide-scale implementation of the product could make a substantial difference to the world's plastic pollution.

“The advantage with recycling in place is that we avoid all of the truck traffic in and out of the construction zone,” Sean Weaver, the president of TechniSoil, says. "That eliminates the emissions from those trips and makes it faster to complete the job. We can do this work very seamlessly at night. The standard process requires heat, but the new process works cold, saving more energy."

Plastic-repaved roads are also more resistant to potholes and cracking and last about three times longer than ones resurfaced with standard asphalt, saving cities and states a substantial amount of money. “Traditional asphalt roads rely on rock for the strength of the road,” Weaver told Fast Company. “With our pavement, it relies on the matrix of a plastic binder for the strength, and the rock is simply a filler.”

Technisoil's Neo binder has proved to be extremely effective in pilot projects with the California Department of Transportation (CalTrans) and the Los Angeles Bureau of Street Services (StreetsLA). The former has already slated the eco-friendly method for repairing highways throughout the state, and StreetsLA also anticipates incorporating Neo binder in future paving projects in Los Angeles. “This is an exciting technology and a sustainable technology,” said StreetsLA Assistant Director Keith Mozee, “And it’s something that we believe going forward could be game-changing if we deploy on a large scale.”

The California company is not the first to use plastic waste to resurface roads. Dr. Rajagopalan Vasudevan, a chemistry professor in India, came up with the idea in 2001. He has since convinced officials to resurface over 9,900 miles (16,000 kilometers) of highways in his home state of Tamil Nadu with plastic waste. The technology has also been used in varying degrees on roads in the Netherlands, Indonesia, England, and South Africa.

TechniSoil's streamlined process being applied on highway 162 in Oroville, California (Credit: CA.gov)

However, not everyone is convinced that plastic roads are the solution to eliminating polymer waste. Some experts assert the the toxic fumes released when plastic is liquefied could be harmful to humans. But Dr. Vasudevan maintains that since the recycled polymer only has to be heated to 338° F (170° C), no harmful substances are released. The expert says, “Plastic decomposes to release toxic fumes only if it is heated at temperatures above 518° F (270° C). So there is no question of toxic gases being released."

There is also concern that the road polymer will eventually disintegrate into microplastic particles and enter our soil and waterways. However, experts say that is unlikely since the blend of asphalt and liquefied plastic is extremely resilient to light and heat.

Weaver is undeterred by the naysayers and stongly believes that his technology may help solve the world's plastic pollution crisis. The CEO says, "We’re turning something meaningless into the single most valuable piece of infrastructure. We can consume all of the world’s waste plastic into our system, and we can do that within the next eight years."

Resources: Neopava.com, Plasticstoday.com, Cnet.com, Dailyadvent.com

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293 Comments
  • littleartist
    littleartistalmost 4 years
    Be kind to the earth! (I have a shirt that says that.)
  • pinkkitty9
    pinkkitty9almost 4 years
    please stop global warming. it hurts our climate, animals, and plants. Don't litter, reuse paper, and always recycle. please make this dream come true. GO CALIFORNIA!!!
    • roxanne3
      roxanne3almost 4 years
      Thank you thank you thank you to everyone, all the scientists and workers and everyone working on this project to help save our earth!!!!!! Please take a moment to appreciate this, people have been trying to figure out the solution to plastic waste on our shared Earth for a long time, and they haven't been as successful as we have all been hoping. Now finally, this!! This is amazing and I am so glad we are finding a way to heal our Earth, after the damage we have done with plastic already.
      • peepster
        peepsteralmost 4 years
        Just stop using plastic altogether like do people need plastic at all it just ruins our planet!!!
        • joohyuun
          joohyuunalmost 4 years
          While plastic can be harmful to the environment, it's extremely difficult to NOT use plastic at all. Plastic is a convenient source of material, making it hard to avoid.
        • gold3nglare
          gold3nglarealmost 4 years
          THANK YOU!!!
        • lovetoread26
          lovetoread26almost 4 years
          Yayyyy! This is such an amazing achievement! I hope this spreads to other places besides California.
          • waterbottlebob
            waterbottlebobalmost 4 years
            Lets stop global warming!
            • red_riot
              red_riotalmost 4 years
              Let's stop global warming and recycle.🌎♻😊👍
              • animereina2021
                animereina2021almost 4 years
                My science class talked about how our ozone layer is breaking because of pollution and man made things. Our ozone are supposed to block UV rays, but since pollution and man made things in our earth we get sunburns. Our next generation will suffer because of how the world is changing, especially with technology. The next generation might also have to deal with even more painful sunburn than what we get now. Businesses don't seem to care about our earth, only about their wealth. Making cars and more things that need coal or gas will make our earth in danger. Soon we will run out of these resources, and cars would have to be discarded unless someone could find a way to make electric powered cars ( which is what people are doing now. I watched a video about it and said that it would be illegal to drive a car in the future, and that these new cars would take you to your destination without you having to drive it yourself!)
                • rockyishaan
                  rockyishaanalmost 4 years
                  Not cool !
                • lil_demon
                  lil_demonalmost 4 years
                  lets all do our part to stop global warming!