Material Recycling Facility
The Mick George Group is helping commercial operators achieve Waste Management objectives and streamline their waste, courtesy of their multiple Material Recycling Facilities (MRF)
Materials Recycling Facilities
The way that waste is being disposed of continues to evolve, and increasingly, so has the emphasis on businesses to embrace such changes, making sure that their waste is managed appropriately from start to finish.
Pressures from regulatory bodies and amends in legislation means that business operators now intentionally have to build Waste Management more conservatively in to their strategic plans, with those that have, receiving the huge opportunity for financial gain, through the reduction of resources going to landfill.
The Mick George Group is helping companies achieve that objective and streamline their waste, courtesy of their multiple owned and operated Materials Recycling Facilities (MRF). Our various plant incorporates state-of-the-art, modern technology that’s revolutionising the way waste is handled; maximising recovery and recycling rates for clients.
Materials Recycling Facilities
Our robust Materials Recycling Facilities confirm the Mick George Group at the forefront of the Waste Industry.
The innovative MRF technology is optimised to process larger capacities of waste materials, in a much more advanced and methodical way than ever before.
Through a process of feeding, screening, shredding and segregation of waste materials, we’re able to recycle high volumes of both ‘dry’ and ‘wet’ waste streams, helping improve our clients environmental credentials.
In essence, we’re able to recover greater resource ‘types’, as we strive towards zero waste to landfill. For example, waste that is often dismissed as ‘residual waste’ – too small or dirty to be recycled, will now be utilised as Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) for Power Stations or similar facilities in exchange for materials such as Coal.
See Our Segregation Plant in Action
How does our Materials Recycling Facility work?
- Screens & Trommels to remove large recyclable items
- Magnetic separation to identify ferrous metals
- Optical separation for plastics
- Air classification can help to separate light and heavy materials (paper for example
Latest Waste Industry News
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Amber Wood Waste Deemed Non Hazardous
Prior to this change in classification, amber waste wood items had been known as potentially hazardous.
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UK Construction Plastic Waste Growing Rapidly
Plastic waste generated in the UK construction industry increased by an average of 210% every two years between 2004 and 2018.
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Over 97% of UK Waste Wood Processed in 2023
A recent industry report looking into UK waste wood processing in 2023 has recorded the highest level to date.
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