The Magazine of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors

News & Views

  • Eco-city in the sea

    Architect Dr Ken Yeang, featured in this month’s issue of RICS Business, has been commissioned to design a 4,000-acre eco-city off the coast of Shanghai.
    Brendon Hooper | 01.05.09

  • Capitalist pigs stay home

    With May Day demonstrations under way around the world and El Porko truly out of favour, any capitalist pigs who have survived the recession would do well to keep a low profile.
    Duncan Johnson | 01.05.09

  • UK house prices slide in April

    UK house prices dropped by 0.4% last month, denting the unexpected 0.9% increase in March, according to figures released by Nationwide.
    Brendon Hooper | 01.05.09

  • Call for stronger green building regulations

    Governments around the world need to put in place stronger building regulations and create more price incentives for energy-efficient buildings if dangerous climate change is to be avoided, according to a report.
    Duncan Johnson | 29.04.09

  • ‘Innovative ideas’ support for UK companies

    UK companies are to be supported to develop new products and services in diverse areas such as health, defence, transport and construction through a new £100m Government scheme.
    Brendon Hooper | 29.04.09

  • Keep on running

    UK sports retailer JJB Sports has staved off administration today after creditors voted for the board’s rescue plan.
    Brendon Hooper | 28.04.09

  • Windier waters could boost wind projects

    Coastal waters off East Anglia and Essex in the UK could host many more wind farms, due to stronger and more frequent winds possibly resulting from climate change.
    Brendon Hooper | 27.04.09

  • IMF predicts long UK housing slump

    UK homeowners should expect a prolonged slump in the housing market, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
    Duncan Johnson | 27.04.09

  • Coal-fired commitment

    New coal-fired power stations built in the UK will have to commit to full-scale use of carbon capture and storage technology by 2025 in order to get planning permission, according to Energy and Climate Change Minister Ed Miliband.
    Brendon Hooper | 24.04.09

  • Great news for green industries

    The UK Government’s £1bn pledge to help combat climate change is a positive step, although it’s unclear how the money will get to projects, and what the timescales are.
    Guest editor | 23.04.09

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Halving construction waste to landfill

Guest editor | 23.11.09
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Over 200 companies have signed up to WRAP’s Construction Commitments: Halving Waste to Landfill scheme

This is a voluntary industry initiative designed to collectively halve, by 2012, the amount of construction, demolition and excavation waste which goes to landfill each year in the UK.

However, there are only two demolition contractors in their number. This is somewhat surprising as demolition accounts for over 90% of construction waste and managing it is the single biggest cost for the demolition contractor.

The Site Waste Management Plan Regulations (SWMP), which came into force last year, require contractors to estimate the quantity of each type of waste expected to be produced and track their recovery and destination throughout the lifecycle of the project.

Whilst this only applies to projects exceeding £300k in value, in effect this means that all but the smallest projects must have a SWMP.

Signing-up to the WRAP scheme obliges contractors to go much further and set specific targets for reducing waste to landfill, embed these objectives into their corporate policies/procedures and report/publish their performance.

Demolition contractors can thus influence the overall performance of a project by ensuring that the waste generated by the demolition, 90% of the total for project remember, is re-used or recycled or at the very least diverted from landfill. In effect we seek to produce not waste, but product from the demolition process.

With landfill taxes rising at a rate of £3 a tonne every year (by 2010/11 landfill tax will be at a whopping £48 a tonne) it is in a demolition contractor’s interests to recover and re-use or recycle as much waste as possible.

Use of WRAP’s Quality Protocol for concrete aggregate also enables demolition operators to leave greater quantities of graded aggregate on-site (for use in the build phase) and so further reduce costs and CO2 generation of transporting it off-site.

There remains a lot of room for improvement as clients and designers get to grips with the ICE demolition protocol which calls for early design work to seek to make use of the demolition products.

If the demolition contractor can be given clear requirements on the products which might be needed during the build phase, then he can look at the raw material and see what can be generated during the work, be it high grade road sub-base, medium grade fill for voids, for piling mats or for later landscaping to materials such as slate for re-incorporation in the new building.

Paul Clarke Scholes is the HSQE manager for Clifford Devlin



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