How to Retire Tires Cumming GA

The issue of what to do with discarded used tires has become a world-wide environmental problem. Only a fraction of them can be used for asphalt or road construction. They also pose a problem in landfills , since they tend to “rise.” If left in the open, they collect water and mosquitoes use them to breed.

Forsyth County Transfer Station
770-205-2176
351 Tolbert Street
Cumming, GA
CloudBlue
678-602-8305
1887 McFarland Road
Alpharetta, GA
Roswell Recycling Center
770-442-8822
11570 Maxwell Road
Alpharetta, GA
Alpharetta Drop Off Site
678-407-6216
1790 Hembree Road
Alpharetta, GA
Atlanta Recycling & Removal Solutions
678-763-8478
558 lewis rd.
Canton, GA
Atlanta Recycling Solutions, LLC
678-566-6665
1026 Windward Ridge Parkway
Alpharetta, GA
Georgia E-Waste
678-662-2148
1030 Winward Parkway
Alpharetta, GA
Forsyth County Transfer Station
770-205-3010
3678 Old Atlanta Road
Suwanee, GA
Georgia E-Waste, LLC
770-720-6500
115 Wes Walker Memorial
Ball Ground, GA
Ultimate Trading Solutions, Inc.
404-452-6021
435 Foe Creek Drive
Roswell, GA
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How to Retire Tires

How Should We Retire Tires?

written by Mark Sneller, PhD | How Should We Retire Tires?The issue of what to do with discarded used tires has become a world-wide environmental problem. Only a fraction of them can be used for asphalt or road construction. They also pose a problem in landfills , since they tend to “rise.” If left in the open, they collect water and mosquitoes use them to breed. In addition, they are unsightly and take up space in storage yards and backyards . The EPA lists one hundred and twelve companies in the United States that burn tires as a sole fuel, or as a fuel supplement added to coal, coke, fuel oil or natural gas. These plants burn tires in the range of 200 to 300 tires per hour.

Generally, tires contain the same level of heavy metals as coal, with the exceptions of chromium and zinc. Chromium is present in steel belted tires and zinc is necessary for the rubber annealing process. Chlorine is also present in tires in higher concentrations than in other fuels.

When tires are added to another fuel source, the general trend is for the amount of carbon monoxide (CO) emissions to increase because of incomplete combustion. More importantly, along with CO production, is the emission of dioxins and furans, the most toxic carcinogens known, which are formed as a result of incomplete combustion in the presence of chlorine. The emissions of dioxins and furans have not been monitored adequately in many cases of tire burning.

The important point here is that a huge number of tires is taken out of the environment and burned for energy. The trade-off is increased atmospheric pollution that is often well above state and federal health standards .

There are a number of possible solutions to the problem of old tire usage with burning them, such as development of new technologies that incorporate tire chips and the creation of their microscopic fragments for home and building construction and water-proofing of clothing and other materials.

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