Deceuninck brings new recycling facility on line

Deceuninck Group has announced that it has put a new recycling facility into service at its recycling and compounding site in Diksmuide, Belgium.

The high-tech recycling line will reportedly allow Deceuninck to recycle up to 45,000 tonnes of PVC-U a year. Input material will be sourced from post-industrial waste collection (own scrap and customers off-cuts), as well as from what Deceuninck describes as the ‘huge amount’ of 30-40 year old first generation PVC-U windows which are gradually being replaced.

Deceuninck says the investment confirms its belief in PVC-U as a sustainable and future-proof material for the building industry and claims that its recycling facility will save more than 2 million windows per year from landfill or incineration.

The installation includes the latest technology which will enable Deceuninck to recycle PVC-U profiles of all colours and of all different compositions, including those containing glass-fibre. During the recycling process, all contaminations are removed, grinded and sorted by colour. After granulation, the recycled material, which is a perfect alternative to virgin material, is used for the extrusion of new PVC-U window profiles.

Francis Van Eeckhout, Deceuninck CEO, said: “This investment underlines the ecological ambition of both Deceuninck and our customers. The increasing use of recycled materials will further reduce the ecological footprint of our products and of our production processes. It will also reduce dependency on virgin material supply and mitigate to a certain extent the negative effect of fluctuating raw material prices.”

Rob McGlennon, Deceuninck UK managing director, said: “It’s important for us to close the loop and make our processes as sustainable as possible. Deceuninck’s new recycling plant, close to our worldwide headquarters in Belgium demonstrates this commitment to sustainability.”

No posts to display