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Waste or valuable resource – a critical European review on re-using and managing tunnel excavation material

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TLDR
In this paper, a detailed review of legislation and technical concepts within the scope of reusing excavated rock and soil across Europe focusing on the Alpine countries is presented, where Austria, Switzerland and France prove to be role models in re-using excavating material whereas Italy is providing a limited amount of national solutions.
Abstract
Re-use of excavated rock and soil from subsurface tunnelling has become an essential legal and technical factor in underground construction projects. European Union initiatives have caused an emergence of legal documents and technical guidelines for re-using excavated material. An improving situation towards a homogeneous European legislation is missing and site-specific re-use solutions are still favoured within the framework of national legislation. In this paper, we present a detailed review of legislation and technical concepts within the scope of re-using excavated rock and soil across Europe focusing on the Alpine countries. Austria, Switzerland and France prove to be role models in re-using excavating material whereas Italy is providing a limited amount of national solutions. Excavated rock and soil are still considered waste, which hampers legislation procedures and efficient technical re-use as a potential resource. National guidelines and recommendations bear huge potential to serve as a basis for a homogenisation of European legislation. Technical limitations imply physical and chemical characterisation of excavated rock and soil as well as their positioning in relation to inert waste thresholds, which requires a sophisticated material flow analysis. We introduce a material flow analysis concept installed on a tunnel boring machine managing on-line analyses, conditioning, separation and transport to consumers of excavated material resource-efficiently within a mutual European legal framework. A dedicated European authority is suggested to undertake responsibility for the material management and governing a technical database obliged to aim for maximum, efficient re-use and public awareness.

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Core-Shell structured ceramsite made by excavated soil and expanded perlite through cold-bonded technology

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Applicability of excavated rock material: A European technical review implying opportunities for future tunnelling projects

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Barriers and Challenges to Waste Management Hindering the Circular Economy in Sub-Saharan Africa

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Quantitative methods for predicting underground construction waste considering reuse and recycling.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Circular Economy: The Concept and its Limitations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the concept of circular economy from the perspective of WCED sustainable development and sustainability science, and conduct a critical analysis of the concept from a perspective of environmental sustainability, identifying six challenges, for example those of thermodynamics and system boundaries, that need to be resolved for CE to contribute to global net sustainability.
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Material efficiency: A white paper

TL;DR: In this article, four major strategies for reducing material demand through material efficiency are discussed: longer-lasting products; modularization and remanufacturing; component re-use; designing products with less material.
Journal ArticleDOI

European Soil Data Centre: Response to European policy support and public data requirements

TL;DR: The European Soil Data Center (ESDAC) as discussed by the authors is one of the data centers established by the European Commission and the European Environment Agency (EEA) to collect soil data and information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Construction and demolition waste best management practice in Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize core principles and linked best practices for the management of construction and demolition waste across the entire construction value chain, which could dramatically improve resource efficiency and reduce environmental impact by: reducing waste generation, minimising transport impacts, maximising reuse and recycling by improving the quality of secondary materials and optimising the environmental performance of treatment methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers to the Circular Economy – Integration of Perspectives and Domains

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified barriers to a transition to the circular economy, which are financial, structural, operational, attitudinal and technological, and they are also characterized by a need to increase integration between a number of different perspectives and domains in industry.
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