Cauldon Cement Plant, Aggragate Industries, Staffordshire Moorlands.
The Cauldon cement plant in the Staffordshire Moorlands where the waste ceramics will be converted.
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Aggregate Industries and Johnson Tiles team up for green scheme to recycle waste ceramics into cement 

1 min read

Thousands of tonnes of waste ceramics from one of the UK’s largest tile manufacturers will be recycled in order to make cement as part of a pioneering new partnership.

Leading building materials supplier Aggregate Industries has agreed a four-year deal with Johnson Tiles to take 20,000 tonnes of legacy waste and broken production scrap a year from its Stoke-on-Trent factory. 

The tiles will make the short trip from The Potteries to Aggregate Industries’ Cauldon cement plant in the Staffordshire Moorlands, where it will be used as an alternative raw material. 

It will be crushed and mixed with limestone and other raw component parts before going through the chemical heat process in the kiln to make cement. 

The recycled ceramics will replace virgin materials, such as shale, meaning less materials need to be extracted from the ground and natural resources can be prolonged for longer. 

Andrew Whyatt, Geocycle UK General Manager at Aggregate Industries, said: “We are delighted to be working with such a Potteries stalwart as Johnson Tiles in order to recycle what would otherwise be a waste product.  

“Materials such as this offer a great alternative to excavating fresh raw materials, preserving our local natural resources, whilst offering a solution whereby 100 per cent of the material will be upcycled into new local cement.  

 “Both companies share a drive towards sustainable manufacturing and partnerships like this are vital as Aggregate Industries aims to reclaim or recycle three million tonnes of materials by 2025.” 

Some of the waste ceramic tiles that will be used to make cement.

Jason Bridges, Procurement and Production Director at Johnson Tiles said: “We are delighted in forming this partnership. 

“It’s wonderful to see waste from one industry replacing a virgin raw material in another. This fits with our own ambitions on reducing our environmental impact and closing the loop on process waste.” 

Cauldon was Britain’s first dry process cement plant when it opened in 1957. The plant now produces one million tonnes of cement a year and employs 125 permanent staff and 30 contractors. 

Nigel Pye

Experienced journalist with a 30-year career in the newspaper and PR industry and a proven record for breaking stories for the national and international press. Nigel is the Editor of Daily Focus and Head of Creative at i-creation. Other work includes scriptwriting, magazine and video production, crisis communications and TV and radio broadcasts.

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