Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher
Photo Credit To MB Crusher

Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher

Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher

The world could run out of topsoil in about 60 years if we continue to degrade it at the current rate, so in the European Parliament, the first steps for preservation have been taken with the approval of the Nature Restoration Law (NRL), a Regulation that provides for the restoration of at least 30% of natural habitats, and the increase of urban green spaces by 2030.

Removing the topsoil to allow for infrastructure construction is standard practice, with the excavated earth usually classified as waste – but it ceases to be waste if it is fully recovered.

Recycling and reusing the soil is essential not only to save the costs associated with disposal and the potential repurchase of new material, but also to prevent the contamination of the soil with materials from other areas.

With MB Crusher attachments installed on heavy equipment that is already present on site, recycling and material management becomes easier, more sustainable, and economically in terms of time.

Invasive weeds leave Versailles

At the western end of the Château de Versailles in France, right on the edge of the Gally Gardens, a 20,000 pound Mecalac excavator works in the materials storage depot. An MB-S10 Screening Bucket is installed at the end of its boom.

“We needed to sift the excavated material to gather soil and compost to arrange the flower beds and lawns of the Gardens” – says Joël Fauvel, Deputy Director of the Department of Gardens of Trianon and Marly. “Before our gardeners had to manually load the excavated soil on a mechanical sieve mounted on a frame. Now with the MB Crusher Screening Bucket, separating the materials is much easier and faster.”

“The most important thing” continues Fauvel “is that the soil processed with the MB Screening Bucket has a better quality as it contains fewer weed roots and purity is essential to be able to reuse it. Now the soil that returns to the ground is much cleaner.”

Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher

Going back to where you came from in Peru

There are as many as 9 miles of excavations to be filled during the installation of aqueducts and sewage networks in El Porvenir, a small Peruvian community.

Using the same excavated material for bedding is beneficial for the construction site, but more importantly, it benefits the environment. A challenging task during the rainy season is processing the excavated material when it is wet.

The problem was solved by installing an MB Crusher MB-HDS212 Padding Bucket on a Bobcat mini-excavator already on site. As there is no need to buy filling materials, no expensive truck trips to and from the construction site, and the big bonus is that the extracted soils have been cleaned and returned to their original location.

Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher

Everything is locally sourced

During excavation work, soil is often mixed with branches, stones, roots, and other “contaminating” materials, but there is no need to send everything to a landfill. With the MB-HDS Padding Bucket it is easy and quick to separate impurities from the earth, and then reuse the soil.

In Germany, a construction site had this exact problem: the nearest landfill was about 22 miles away and this would result in an increase in time and costs. The problem was solved by using an MB-HDS207 Padding Bucket to screen the material and separate the soil from stones and roots.

The environment functions like an organism, where a single intervention can have dire consequences for the entire ecosystem. If the balance is disrupted, the entire system is at risk of being destroyed.

By simply processing the excavated earth with MB Crusher equipment to obtain “clean” soil and contribute to environmental protection.

All you have to do is use the equipment already on the job site.

Protect, Recycle and Recover Topsoil with MB Crusher

Post source : MB Crusher

About The Author

Anthony has worked in the construction industry for many years and looks forward to bringing you news and stories on the highways industry from all over the world.

Related posts