Staff at KC Recycling in Trail, B.C. | Courtesy of KC Recycling.[/caption]
KC Recycling, which prepares CRT glass for Teck's lead smelter in British Columbia, is doubling its glass-processing capacity. The move is in response to Glencore closing its New Brunswick smelter.
Located just down the highway from Teck's smelter in Trail, B.C., KC Recycling announced it will run a second shift and install bulk handling equipment, allowing it to double the amount of glass it handles.
"We can process pretty much as much as we can get," said Pete Stamper, CEO of KC Recycling.
The company has processed about 16 million pounds of glass a year, Stamper said, and going forward it is forecasting it'll receive an additional 12 million to 16 million pounds annually from eastern Canada.
The announcement comes after global mining and commodities trading company Glencore began shutting down its lead smelter in eastern Canada. That facility, in the village of Belledune, took in millions of pounds of CRT glass annually, including at least 12 million pounds from Columbus, Ohio company Novotec Recycling. The closure has shifted flows of CRT glass from eastern Canada and the U.S.; Novotec said it's already working to secure agreements with two other smelters.
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Staff at KC Recycling in Trail, B.C. | Courtesy of KC Recycling.[/caption]
KC Recycling, which prepares CRT glass for Teck's lead smelter in British Columbia, is doubling its glass-processing capacity. The move is in response to Glencore closing its New Brunswick smelter.
Located just down the highway from Teck's smelter in Trail, B.C., KC Recycling announced it will run a second shift and install bulk handling equipment, allowing it to double the amount of glass it handles.
"We can process pretty much as much as we can get," said Pete Stamper, CEO of KC Recycling.
The company has processed about 16 million pounds of glass a year, Stamper said, and going forward it is forecasting it'll receive an additional 12 million to 16 million pounds annually from eastern Canada.
The announcement comes after global mining and commodities trading company Glencore began shutting down its lead smelter in eastern Canada. That facility, in the village of Belledune, took in millions of pounds of CRT glass annually, including at least 12 million pounds from Columbus, Ohio company Novotec Recycling. The closure has shifted flows of CRT glass from eastern Canada and the U.S.; Novotec said it's already working to secure agreements with two other smelters.
Staff at KC Recycling in Trail, B.C. | Courtesy of KC Recycling.[/caption]
KC Recycling, which prepares CRT glass for Teck's lead smelter in British Columbia, is doubling its glass-processing capacity. The move is in response to Glencore closing its New Brunswick smelter.
Located just down the highway from Teck's smelter in Trail, B.C., KC Recycling announced it will run a second shift and install bulk handling equipment, allowing it to double the amount of glass it handles.
"We can process pretty much as much as we can get," said Pete Stamper, CEO of KC Recycling.
The company has processed about 16 million pounds of glass a year, Stamper said, and going forward it is forecasting it'll receive an additional 12 million to 16 million pounds annually from eastern Canada.
The announcement comes after global mining and commodities trading company Glencore began shutting down its lead smelter in eastern Canada. That facility, in the village of Belledune, took in millions of pounds of CRT glass annually, including at least 12 million pounds from Columbus, Ohio company Novotec Recycling. The closure has shifted flows of CRT glass from eastern Canada and the U.S.; Novotec said it's already working to secure agreements with two other smelters.
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