Material Recycling Helps to Achieve a Recycling-Based Society
Effective Resource Recovery through Shredding and Sorting
Environmental pollution caused by increasing amounts of plastic waste in the oceans is becoming a more serious problem throughout the world. In Japan, the Act on the Promotion of Sorted Collection and Recycling of Containers and Packaging was passed in April 2022, another sign that concern toward recycling issues is increasing both in Japan and abroad.
As part of Kubota's aim to be an “Essentials Innovator for Supporting Life,” committed to a prosperous society and the cycle of nature, the company is putting efforts into the core of its recycling operations: the development of shredders and its Plant Solutions Business.
For this article, we visited a new recycling plant where Kubota's shredders are at work. What we saw was that these high-performance shredders are more than just tools for shredding waste; they are machines that can "produce" useful metals and an invaluable tool for realizing a recycling-based society.
A Plant that Recycles Items from Train Cars to Small Home Appliances
The district of Fushiki in Takaoka City, Toyama Prefecture, once prospered as a key trading location for the Kitamae-bune (northern-bound merchant ships) from the 1600s to the 1800s.
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This is the location of the head office and plant of Nihon Sougou Recycle Co., Ltd., an advanced recycling business that goes beyond expectations. KUBOTA Environmental Engineering Corporation oversaw the plant's design, including the shredder.
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The company's head office and plant were built on the site of a former paper mill in Takaoka City, Toyama Prefecture. A walkway and playground on its premises are open to local residents, part of their efforts to give back to the community. In front of the building in this picture are railroad tracks that have been present since the days of the paper mill. Although no longer in use, they have become an important symbol for the company, which is involved in disassembly of railcars.
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This is the recycling plant as viewed from above. It is housed completely indoors, and its scale makes even heavy equipment look small. Except for a few machines, almost all of its equipment is electric, emitting no exhaust gases and protecting the health of its workers.
From Small Home Appliances Come Valuable Metals
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This pile of resources is about to be sent through the shredder. A closer look shows bicycles, rice cookers, and electric fans.
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Before shredding, the items are gradually loaded into the hopper and slowly sent by conveyor belt to the shredder inside the structure on the other side of the white wall.
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This shows shredded resources being transported on a conveyor belt to the magnetic separator located in the upper level of the recycling plant. We can see that the materials have been shredded very finely.
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The plant has a two-level structure with equipment above the yards used for collecting sorted metals.
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These are ball-shaped metals collected in a yard. Copper is in the center, aluminum in front, and iron in the back. They are still warm when held.
Plant Design Influences Productivity Along with Shredder Performance
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Yasushi Takakura is the President and CEO of Nihon Sougou Recycle Co., Ltd.
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Daisuke Hamada of the Plant Design Section in KUBOTA Environmental Engineering Corporation's Recycling Engineering Department designed the entire recycling plant, including the newly installed shredder and post-treatment processes. Behind him is a magnetic separator that separates ferrous and nonferrous materials after shredding.
Aiming for Technological Development that Contributes to Material Recycling
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Wataru Sone is the Office Manager of Resource Circulation Business Planning and Sales Department at Kubota.
- From Kubota Press (Japan)
- Kubota Press (Japan) is Kubota’s owned media that covers the fields of food, water, and the environment from the perspectives of people, technology, and communities to convey where Kubota is today and give a realistic picture of where we work.