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The Border
Environment Cooperation Commission is seeking private sector
solutions to one of the U.S.- Mexico border’s most vexing
problems – how to dispose of used tires that are piled by the
millions in storage yards all along the border.
BECC is a bi-national agency, funded by
both the U.S. and Mexican governments. Its mission is to help
develop and certify environmental infrastructure projects that
improve the quality of life of people in the U.S.-Mexico border
region.
BECC General Manager Daniel Chacón told
U.S. and Mexican legislators recently that scrap tires are a
bi-national problem, because the dangers they pose can affect
people in both countries and because so many of the tires that
wind up in Mexican storage yards come from the United States.
The United States generates about 280
million used tires a year and exports about 5 percent of them.
In Mexico and other countries some of these become affordable
replacement tires for private vehicles, but, due to their poor
condition, are often quickly discarded. With other tires in even
worse condition, the discards wind up in enormous piles that
become habitat for mosquitoes and rodents, which spread disease.
Left laying for years the tires can contaminate soils and water,
and become the fuel for fires touched off by accident or arson,
Chacón said.
Yet, scrap tires potentially have many
uses, he added.
Besides their utility as retreads, other
methods of reusing or disposing of the tires are: civil
engineering applications, such as using them for structural
backfill or erosion control; applications using their ground
rubber; incineration of whole tires and shredded tires as tire
derived fuel (TDF), which is frequently used in cement plants;
using either whole or shredded tires as landfill; and
gasification and pyrolysis, which use intense heat to break the
tires into their component elements, which may then be...
...Continued
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