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You are here: Home Environment Life Cycle Assessment The waste hierarchy Retreading
  • What is a Life Cycle Assessment Study?
  • The waste hierarchy
    • Retreading
    • Recycling
    • Incineration
    • Landfill
  • Recycling versus incineration of scrap tyres or civil engineering applications

Retreading

When a tyre is worn down, it is possible to give it a new rubber tread and thus give it a new life. This process is called retreading. The prerequisite for this process is the careful sorting and checking of scrap tyres so that only those tyres with no damage on the inner body of steel (the tyre casing) are used. Thus the production of retreaded tyres requires a disproportionately high level of manual work.

In the past, however, it was profitable to manufacture retreaded car tyres. The savings obtained by reusing tyre casings made retreaded tyres cheaper than new tyres so retreaded tyres could be sold at reasonable prices.

But with the fully automated production of new tyres all this has changed. It is now possible to manufacture new passenger car tyres as cheaply as it is to make retreaded tyres, so this market has almost disappeared. However, retreading is still used to a certain extent when it comes to truck tyres.

The trend is that even fewer tyres will be retreaded in the future.

Latest news from Genan
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New Genan Sales Director, Eastern US

From 11th of April 2012 Jake Alexander is appointed Genan Sales Director for Eastern US. Jake Alexander will be responsible for the sports surfaces and moulding industry market in the Eastern US.


New Area Sales Manager in Genan A/S

From 1st March 2012 Frank Bormann is appointed Area Sales Manager of Scandinavia. Frank Bormann will be responsible for the cooperation between Genan A/S and consultants as well as customers in Scandinavia, primarily within Genan’s sports-related business area.


Artificial pitches a step closer to a return in English football

English football is a step closer to reintroducing artificial pitches after the Football League announced plans to seek opinion on their possible return. A public consultation will run until the end of April 2012 and canvas the views of officials, fans, clubs and football associations as well as consultants, manufacturers and laboratories.


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