A view of Glencore's smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. | Google Street View[/caption]
Glencore is permanently closing its New Brunswick lead smelter, which consumes millions of pounds of CRT glass each year.
Glencore Canada, part of global mining and commodities trading giant Glencore, announced on Nov. 13 it would shut down the lead smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. The decommissioning has already begun, and the facility will cease all operations by the end of the year, according to the company.
A leader at the smelter's main CRT glass supplier, NovoTec Recycling, said the closure won't impact that company's ability to receive and ship glass. Tom Bolon, NovoTec's CEO, told E-Scrap News he is working on deals to supply other smelters. He hopes to begin shipping processed glass from NovoTec's Columbus, Ohio facility to those smelters in January.
In the meantime, NovoTec is not asking CRT suppliers to reduce shipments, he said.
[caption id="attachment_12686" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
A view of Glencore's smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. | Google Street View[/caption]
Glencore is permanently closing its New Brunswick lead smelter, which consumes millions of pounds of CRT glass each year.
Glencore Canada, part of global mining and commodities trading giant Glencore, announced on Nov. 13 it would shut down the lead smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. The decommissioning has already begun, and the facility will cease all operations by the end of the year, according to the company.
A leader at the smelter's main CRT glass supplier, NovoTec Recycling, said the closure won't impact that company's ability to receive and ship glass. Tom Bolon, NovoTec's CEO, told E-Scrap News he is working on deals to supply other smelters. He hopes to begin shipping processed glass from NovoTec's Columbus, Ohio facility to those smelters in January.
In the meantime, NovoTec is not asking CRT suppliers to reduce shipments, he said.
A view of Glencore's smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. | Google Street View[/caption]
Glencore is permanently closing its New Brunswick lead smelter, which consumes millions of pounds of CRT glass each year.
Glencore Canada, part of global mining and commodities trading giant Glencore, announced on Nov. 13 it would shut down the lead smelter in Belledune, New Brunswick. The decommissioning has already begun, and the facility will cease all operations by the end of the year, according to the company.
A leader at the smelter's main CRT glass supplier, NovoTec Recycling, said the closure won't impact that company's ability to receive and ship glass. Tom Bolon, NovoTec's CEO, told E-Scrap News he is working on deals to supply other smelters. He hopes to begin shipping processed glass from NovoTec's Columbus, Ohio facility to those smelters in January.
In the meantime, NovoTec is not asking CRT suppliers to reduce shipments, he said.
Categories