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Hitachi saves in paint shop

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22 May 2012

The paint shop at Hitachi's Amsterdam factory.

The paint shop at Hitachi's Amsterdam factory.

A saving of €60,000 per year is being predicted through the introduction of a new process to reduce chemical waste from the painting process at its Amsterdam, Netherlands, factory by Hitachi Construction Machinery (Europe) - HCME.

Developed in co-operation with Advantage Chemicals, the process will save money on labour and energy, as well as disposal costs for waste water and sludge.

Before the new system was introduced in December 2011, the painting process produced approximately 260 tonnes of waste per year.

It used a classic system, in which the paint would sink or form as sediment at the bottom of the pool of water beneath the paint facility. Twice a year, the pool had to be cleaned, and the water and paint had to be removed, which was costly in terms of labour, energy, water and waste removal.

The new system is said to have reduced the amount of waste by 88% per year. HCME production engineering manager Robin Huijsman, who is also compliance officer for environmental regulation, said, "Cleaning the pool beneath the paint facility twice a year was a difficult and dirty job. With the new system, we are able to remove the overspray paint from the water, and reuse the water.

"Thanks to the new system, the facility is cleaner and the filtering system that removes paint particles from the air functions better."

The new process combines real-time CoAg (coagulation) systems with waste water treatment systems. Instead of sinking or forming as sediment, the paint is suspended in the water and pumped to a waste treatment tank.

"For this tank, we asked Advantage Chemicals to develop a chemical that is able to remove the paint by making it float," added Mr Huijsman. "The floating paint sludge is then skimmed off the top of the tank and is estimated at 30 tonnes per year."

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